schedule of events...schedule of events unless otherwise noted, all events will take place on the...
TRANSCRIPT
The United States Patent and Trademark Office and The George Washington University Law School
present
The 2015 Works-in-Progress Intellectual Property Colloquium
February 5–7, 2015 at the
United States Patent and Trademark Office Madison Building 600 Dulany Street
Alexandria, VA 22314
Schedule of Events
Unless otherwise noted, all events will take place on the premises of the USPTO Global Intellectual Property Academy in the Madison Building.
All participants will have to pass through a security screening and possess a valid government ID.
Please allow time for the screening when planning your arrival.
Thursday, February 5 6:30 pm – 8:30 pm Welcome Reception at the National Inventors Hall of Fame and
Museum (Madison Building Atrium) Friday, February 6
8:00 am – 9:00 am Presentation on IP Law & Policy at the USPTO, then Breakfast 9:00 am – 10:40 am First Session 10:40 am – 11:00 am Coffee Break 11:00 am – 12:20 pm Second Session 12:20 pm – 2:00 pm Lunch at the Madison South Auditorium (Concourse Level) 2:00 pm – 3:20 pm Third Session 3:20 pm – 3:40 pm Coffee Break 3:40 pm – 5:00 pm Fourth Session 6:30 pm Reception and Dinner at Il Porto, 121 King Street, Alexandria,
second floor. Cash bar; wine served at dinner; music by the WIPIP All-Stars
Saturday, February 7
8:00 am – 9:00 am Presentation on IP at GW Law, then Breakfast 9:00 am – 10:40 am Fifth Session 10:40 am – 11:10 am Coffee Break 11:10 am – 12:30 pm Sixth Session 12:30 pm – 1:00 pm Nourishment Break 1:00 pm – 2:20 pm Seventh Session
Works-in-Progress Intellectual Property (W
IPIP) 2015: Schedule of Presentations as of 2/3/2015
Paris Room
Berne Room
Singapore Room
Venice Room
FRIDAY, February 6, 2015 Session 1: 9:00—10:40
Patent—PTO
Patent Institutions / Policym
aking IP and the Internet
Trademark
� Jay P. Kesan (&
Hsian-shan Yang), A Comparative
Empirical Analysis of Patent Prosecution in the
USPTO
and EPO
� M
ichael Frakes (& M
elissa Wasserm
an), Does the U
S Patent & Tradem
ark Office Grant Too M
any Patents?
� M
elissa Wasserm
an (& M
ichael Frakes), Is the Time
Allocated to Review Patent Applications Inducing
Examiners to Grant Invalid Patents?
� Christopher Funk, Patent Prosecution Bars As a General Rule
� Bryan Choi, Separating Patent-Able from
Patent Act
� Sarah Rajec, Indisputable IP: Case Studies � M
ichael Goodman, Em
pirical Assessment of
Judges’ Behavior
� William
Hubbard, Raising (or Razing?) the Patent Bar
� Gregory Dolin, Dubious Patent Reform
� Scott Kieff (& Troy Paredes), Variations in Internal
Government Structures
� Lucille M. Ponte, Protecting Brand Im
age or Gaming
the System?
� Victoria Schwartz, Privacy Problem
s Start at the Top
� Joseph Mtebe Tungaraza, Cybersquatting: the
Relevance of the UDRP to Developing Countries
� Christine Davik, Access Granted: The Necessity of a
Presumption of Public Access under the CFAA and
Beyond
� Deborah Gerhardt (&
Jon McClanahan), Colors
� Jeanne From
er (& Barton Beebe), The Closing of
the Linguistic Frontier in Trademark Law
� Lisa Ram
sey, Trademarking Everything?
� U
. Shen Goh, Branding Linguistics: What do Coca-
Cola and Chinese Bakeries Have in Comm
on?
� Abraham
Bell (& Ted Sichelm
an & Gideon
Parchomovsky), Tradem
arks as Club Goods
Session 2: 11:00—12:20
Patent—Subject-M
atter Patent Value / Rem
edies IP and Developm
ent Tradem
ark � Christopher Cotropia, U
SPTO’s Patentable Subject-
Matter Analysis After Alice
� Shubha Ghosh, Demarcating N
ature After Myriad
� Dmitry Karshtedt, The Com
pleteness Requirement in
Patent Law
� Stefania Fusco, The Venetian Republic’s Tailoring of Patent Protection to the Characteristics of the Invention
� Jonathan H. Ashtor, Redefining “Valuable Patents” � David Abram
s, Patent Value and Citations
� Jonathan Masur, The M
isuse of Prior Licenses in Setting Patent Dam
ages
� Chris Seaman, Property v. Liability Rules in Patent
Litigation Post E-Bay
� Alexandra George, Spiritual Property: Indigenous Know
ledge Systems in an Intellectual Property
Environment
� Margo Bagley, O
f Indigenous Group “Straws” and
Developed Country “Camels”: Patents, Innovation,
and the Disclosure of Origin requirem
ent
� Joy Y. Xiang, Addressing Climate Change: IP, N
o IP, or Another Possibility?
� Jeremy Sheff, The Ragged Edge of the Lanham
Act
� Rebecca Tushnet, Registering Discontent � M
egan Carpenter, “Behind the Music”: Lanham
Act 2(a)
Session 3: 2:00—3:20
Patent—Claim
s Patent Presum
ptions / Procedure International / Cross-Border
Copyright � Adam
Mossoff, O
’Reilly v. Morse
� Joseph Scott Miller, Reasonably Certain N
otice
� Oskar Liivak, The U
nresolved Ambiguity of Patent
Claims
� Prof. Dr.-Ing. Sigram Schindler, Q
uantification of Inventive Concepts
� Jeremy Bock, An Error-Cost Assessm
ent of the Presum
ption of Validity
� Irina D. Manta (&
Gregory Dolin), Taking Presum
ptions
� Shubha Ghosh, What M
akes a Case Exceptional? Fee Shifting as a Policy Lever
� Greg Reilly, Patent Discovery: A Study in Litigation Reform
� Franck Gloglo, Exceeding the National Boundaries of
IP Rights in Light of the WTO
� Sapna Kumar, Policing Digital Trade
� Elizabeth Winston, Patent Boundaries
� David S. Levine, Temporal Transparency and the
Process of Intellectual Property Lawm
aking
� Abraham
Bell (& Gideon Parchom
ovsky), Copyright Trust
� Rebecca Curtin, The Transactional O
rigins of Author’s Copyright
� Ben Depoorter (&
Alain van Hiel), The Dynamics of
Copyright Enforcement
� Elizabeth Tow
nsend Gard (& Geena Yu), Is Fair U
se Codable?
Session 4: 3:40—5:00
Cross-IP Biotech
Patent—SSO
s and Pledges Copyright
� Mark Lem
ley (& M
ark McKenna), Scope
� Ari Waldm
an, Trust: The Distinction Between the
Private and the Public in IP Law
� Jessica Silbey, IP and Constitutional Equality � Gregory M
andel (& Kristina O
lson & Anne Fast),
What People Think, Know
, and Think They Know
About IP
� Peter Lee, Centralization, Fragmentation and
Replication in the Genomic Data Com
mons
� Jacob S. Sherkow (&
Henry T. Greely), The History of Patenting Genetic M
aterial
� Saurabh Vishnubhakat (& Arti Rai &
Bhaven Sam
pat), The Rise of Bioinformatics Exam
ination at the Patent O
ffice
� Kristen Osenga, Everything I N
eeded to Learn About SSO
s I Didn’t Learn in Law School
� Jurgita Randakeviciute , The Role of Standard Setting O
rganizations With Regard to Balancing
Rights
� Jorge Contreras, Patent Pledges
� Brad Greenberg, Black Box Copyright � Annem
arie Bridy, Aereo: From W
orking Around Copyright to Thinking Inside the (Cable) Box
� Aaron Perzanowski, Digital Property: The U
ncertain Future of O
wnership
� Felix Wu, Secondary Copyright Rem
edies
Works-in-Progress Intellectual Property (W
IPIP) 2015: Schedule of Presentations as of 2/3/2015
Paris Room
Berne Room
Singapore Room
Venice Room
SATURDAY, February 7, 2015 Session 5: 9:00—10:40
Patent—N
PEs Patent—
Rationales Cross-IP
Copyright �
David Schwartz (&
Christopher Cotropia & Jay Kesan),
Patent Assertion Entity (PAE) Lawsuits
� N
icole Shanahan, How Data Liberation W
ill Nix the
Proverbial Patent Troll
� Paul R. Gugliuzza, Patent Trolls, Preem
ption, and Petitioning Im
munity
� Roger Ford, the U
neasy Case for State Anti-Patent Law
s
� Ofer Tur-Sinai, Patents, W
ell-Being, and the State’s Role in Directing Innovation
� Lucas Osborn (and Joshua M
. Pearce), A New
Patent System for a N
ew Age of Innovation
� Srividhya Ragavan, Reorienting Patents as the Protagonist for the Progress of U
seful Arts
� Stephanie Bair, The Psychology of Innovation and Theories of Patent Protection
� Clark D. Asay, Intellectual Property Law
Hybridization
� Patrick Goold, IP Law and the Bundle of Torts
� Irina D. Manta (and Robert E. W
agner), IP Infringem
ent as Vandalism
� Jim Gibson, Copyright Incentives in the Courtroom
� Betsy Rosenblatt, IP, Creativity, and a Sense of Belonging
� Guy Rub, Copyright and Contracts Meet and
Conflict
� D.R. Jones, Libraries, Contract and Copyright � Dem
ing Liu, Time to Rethink Copyright for
Education
Session 6: 11:10—12:30
Patent—N
PEs Patent—
Innovation Policy Tradem
ark Copyright
� Scott Kominers (&
Lauren Cohen), Patent Troll Evidence from
Targeted Firms
� Michael Burstein, Secondary M
arkets for Patents: An Evaluation
� Shawn M
iller (& Ted Sichelm
an), Does Patent Litigation Dim
inish R&D?
� Rachel Sachs, Innovation Law and Policy: Preserving
the Future of Personalized Medicine
� Ted Sichelman (&
Jonathan Barnett), Revisiting Labor M
obility in Innovation Markets
� Xuan-Thao Nguyen, Financing Innovation: Legal
Development of IP as Collateral in Financing
� Sarah Burstein, The High Cost of Cheap Design Rights
� Glynn Lunney, Inefficient Trademark Law
� Peter J. Karol, An Exclusive Right to Judicial Discretion: Learning from
eBay’s Muddled Extension
to Trademark Law
� David Welkow
itz, Willfulness
� Robert Brauneis (& Dotan O
liar), The Electronic Copyright O
ffice Catalog, 1978-Present
� Amanda Reid, N
otice of Continuing Interest in a Copyrighted W
ork
� Chris Hubbles, No Country for O
ld Audio
� Zvi Rosen, Paradoxes and Lessons of State Law
Protection for Sound Recordings
Session 7: 1:00—2:20
Patent Institutions / Policymaking
Biotech Tradem
ark Copyright
� Camilla Hrdy, Patent N
ationally, Innovate Locally
� Cynthia Ho, Drug Rehab: How Cognitive Biases can
Improve Drug Developm
ent
� Megan La Belle, Public Enforcem
ent of Patent Law
� Josh Sarnoff (& Alan M
arco), Is Refiling Practice Doing W
hat It Ought To? I Can N
ame That Invention in X
Words
� Kevin Collins, Justifying Patent Ineligibility: Regulation-Resistant Technologies
� Yaniv Heled, Five Years to the Biologics Price Com
petition and Innovation Act
� N
icholson Price (& Arti Rai), Biosim
ilars and M
anufacturing Trade Secrets
� Liza Vertinsky, The State as Pharm
aceutical Entrepreneur
� Leah Chan Grinvald, Contracting Trademark Fam
e
� William
McGeveran, W
hat Campbell Can (and Can’t)
Teach Trademark Law
� Xiyin Tang, The Case for Genericide Defenses in Artistic W
orks
� James Grim
melm
ann, Copyright for Literate Robots
� Kate Klonick, Comparing Apples to Applejacks:
Cognitive Science Concepts of Similarity Judgm
ent
� Peter Yu, The Copy in Copyright � Andres Saw
icki, Law and Inform
al Rules of Creative Collaboration
1
2015 WORKS-IN-PROGRESS IP COLLOQUIUM ABSTRACTS
Friday, February 6, 2015, Session 1: 9:00–10:40 ........................................................... 2
Patent—PTO ................................................................................................................... 2 Patent Institutions / Policymaking .................................................................................. 6 IP and the Internet ........................................................................................................... 8 Trademark ..................................................................................................................... 10
Friday, February 6, 2015, Session 2: 11:00–12:20 ....................................................... 14
Patent—Subject Matter ................................................................................................. 14 Patent Value / Remedies ............................................................................................... 16 IP and Development ...................................................................................................... 18
Trademark ..................................................................................................................... 19
Friday, February 6, 2015, Session 3: 2:00–3:20 ........................................................... 23
Patent—Claims ............................................................................................................. 23
Patent Presumptions / Procedure .................................................................................. 25 International / Cross-Border ......................................................................................... 27 Copyright ...................................................................................................................... 29
Friday, February 6, 2015, Session 4: 3:40–5:00 ........................................................... 31
Cross-IP ........................................................................................................................ 31
Biotech .......................................................................................................................... 35 Patent—SSOs and Pledges ........................................................................................... 37 Copyright ...................................................................................................................... 38
Saturday, February 7, 2015, Session 1: 9:00–10:40 ..................................................... 42
Patent—NPEs ............................................................................................................... 42 Patent—Rationales ........................................................................................................ 43 Cross-IP ........................................................................................................................ 46
Copyright ...................................................................................................................... 47
Saturday, February 7, 2015, Session 2: 11:10–12:30 ................................................... 50
Patent—NPEs ............................................................................................................... 50 Patent—Innovation Policy ............................................................................................ 51 Trademark ..................................................................................................................... 55 Copyright ...................................................................................................................... 57
Saturday, February 7, 2015, Session 3: 1:00–2:20 ....................................................... 59
Patent Institutions / Policymaking ................................................................................ 59
Biotech .......................................................................................................................... 62 Trademark ..................................................................................................................... 64 Copyright ...................................................................................................................... 66
2
Friday, February 6, 2015, Session 1: 9:00–10:40
Patent—PTO
Jay P. Kesan (& Hsian-shan Yang), A Comparative Empirical Analysis of Patent
Prosecution in the USPTO and EPO
The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office’s 21st Century Strategic Plan presents a
substantial reform of the current patent prosecution system. Two major concerns are
efficiency and quality, and the USPTO is criticized in taking too long to process patent
applications and having examiners who make too many errors in the prosecution
process. Comparative studies have been undertaken to learn the differences in
procedural efficiency and quality of patent examination among important international
patent offices to derive lessons for examiners and prosecutors.
We analyze the duration and outcomes of patent examination at the United States Patent
and Trademark Office (USPTO) and the European Patent Office (EPO) by utilizing a
matched data set (same underlying invention and originating from the US and from
Europe) covering a sample of 34,904 applications filed during 2002 and 2008, from
which patents were issued by both the USPTO and the EPO. Focusing on pendency and
the differences in issued claims, our empirical findings show that the duration of patent
examination is related to the patentee’s characteristics, patent value, and its country of
priority. Our results suggest that a patent originating from the U.S. has significantly
better procedural efficiency at both the USPTO and the EPO.
Michael Frakes (& Melissa Wasserman), Does the US Patent & Trademark Office
Grant Too Many Patents?
Many believe the root cause of the patent system’s dysfunction is that the U.S. Patent &
Trademark Office (PTO or Agency) is issuing too many invalid patents that unnecessarily
drain consumer welfare. Concerns regarding the Agency’s over-granting tendencies have
recently spurred the Supreme Court to take a renewed interest in substantive patent law
and have driven Congress to enact the first major patent reform act in over sixty years.
Policymakers, however, have been modifying the system in an effort to increase patent
quality in the dark. As there exists little to no compelling empirical evidence the PTO is
actually over granting patents, lawmakers are left trying to fix the patent system without
even understanding the root causes of the system’s shortcomings.
This Article begins to rectify this deficiency, advancing the conversation along two
dimensions. First, it provides a novel theoretical source for a granting bias on the part of
the Agency, positing that the inability of the PTO to finally reject a patent application
may create an incentive for the resource-constrained Agency to allow additional patents.
Second, this Article attempts to explore, through a sophisticated natural-experiment
framework, whether the Agency is in fact acting on this incentive and over granting
patents. Our findings suggest that the PTO is biased towards allowing patents. Moreover,
our results suggest the PTO is targeting its over-granting tendencies towards those
patents it stands to benefit from the most—i.e., those patent applications directed towards
3
technologies that have historically had high-repeat filing rates such as information,
computer, and health-related technologies. Our findings provide policymakers with much
needed evidence that the PTO is indeed over granting patents. Our results also suggest
that the literature has overlooked a substantial source of Agency bias and hence recent
fixes to improve patent quality will not achieve their desired outcome of extinguishing the
PTO’s over-granting proclivities.
Melissa Wasserman (& Michael Frakes), Is the Time Allocated to Review Patent
Applications Inducing Examiners to Grant Invalid Patents?
We explore how examiner behavior is altered by the time allocated for reviewing patent
applications. Insufficient examination time may crowd out examiner search and rejection
efforts, leaving examiners more inclined to grant otherwise invalid applications. To test
this prediction, we use application-level data to trace the behavior of individual
examiners over the course of a series of promotions that carry with them reductions in
examination-time allocations. We find evidence demonstrating that the promotions of
interest are associated with reductions in examination scrutiny and increases in granting
tendencies. Our findings imply that if all examiners were given the same time to review
applications as is extended to those examiners with the most generous time allocations,
the Patent Office would grant nearly 20 percent fewer patents. Moreover, we find
evidence suggesting that those additional patents being issued on the margin as a result
of such time pressures are of below-average levels of quality.
Christopher Funk, Patent Prosecution Bars As a General Rule
In some patent cases, one party’s outside attorneys may view the other’s confidential
technology while drafting or amending patent claims before the Patent Office in the same
technological field. Without proper safeguards, these attorneys could abuse their
protected access to that confidential technology by targeting and patenting it with the
very claims they are drafting. Courts frequently protect against this danger by including
a patent prosecution bar in a protective order. A patent prosecution bar prohibits those
who access the opposing party’s confidential technology from prosecuting patents that
cover that same technology. But many courts refuse to enter patent prosecution bars,
leaving litigants’ confidential technology vulnerable to misuse.
While these bars are procedural and often handled by magistrate judges, disputes over
them can erupt into satellite litigation. One party wants to forbid the other’s attorneys
and experts from targeting its confidential technology with new patent claims. The other
party wants to ensure that the attorneys and experts most familiar with its technology and
patents represent the party before the Patent Office. With weighty interests on both sides,
district courts have taken conflicting approaches to prosecution bars. Before a recent
decision of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, some district courts held
that those who prosecuted patents were always making competitive decisions for their
client and those decisions justified a prosecution bar. Other district courts held that
prosecuting patents did not necessarily involve competitive decisions and that the need
for a prosecution bar depended on the unique facts of each case.
4
To settle these differences, the Federal Circuit took up a petition for mandamus relief in
In re Deutsche Bank Trust Company Americas, 605 F.3d 1373 (Fed. Cir. 2010). In that
case, the Federal Circuit rejected the view that patent prosecution always involved
competitive decisions and that prosecution bars should be routinely entered. Instead, the
appellate court charged district courts to evaluate the activities of each attorney to
decide if his or her record showed a history of making competitive decisions in
prosecution. If the moving party demonstrated such a history, then the district court must
balance the risk that the attorney would misuse the producing party’s confidential
information in prosecution against the receiving party’s choice of counsel and that
counsel’s prior work for the client. Only after balancing may the district court enter a
prosecution bar. And if the moving party could not show the other side’s attorney had a
history of competitive decisionmaking, the Federal Circuit opined that a prosecution bar
was unnecessary.
Deutsche Bank resolved one split among the district courts, but it created and
perpetuated others. District courts have split over what Deutsche Bank requires a party
to show to justify a prosecution bar. Some courts have held that a party must show that
each attorney’s prosecution activities justify a bar. Others have held that the moving
party must show only that the proposed prosecution bar is reasonable and that the
opposing party must show that an individual attorney’s activities justify an exemption to
the bar. Both before and after Deutsche Bank, district courts have split over whether a
prosecution bar should cover post-grant proceedings in the Patent Office that test the
validity of a previously issued patent and permit amendments to that patent. In most
cases, the post-grant proceeding concerns the asserted patent that the attorneys and
experts are comparing to the other side’s confidential technology. Some district courts
say a prosecution bar should always cover post-grant proceedings, some say it should
never cover them, and others say it should cover them unless the accused infringer
initiated the proceeding. Deutsche Bank also created a loophole for litigants seeking to
avoid prosecution bars by suggesting that bars should apply only to those attorneys that
the moving party can show has made competitive decisions in prosecution. Accordingly,
district courts often reject prosecution bars for attorneys or experts with little or no
record of prosecuting patents, leaving them seemingly free to view the opposing party’s
confidential technology and advise others on how to draft a patent that targets that
technology.
Deutsche Bank has proved unworkable. To resolve the district courts’ splits and close
the loophole, the Federal Circuit should abandon its balancing test and focus on counsel-
by-counsel analysis. Instead, the court should adopt a general rule barring parties’
representatives who access the opposing party’s confidential technology from performing
prosecution activities that trigger the memory of that technology and present an
opportunity to patent the same. Those risky prosecution activities include determining
the type and scope of patent protection worth pursuing, drafting or reviewing patent
applications, and drafting or amending claims during an original prosecution or post-
grant proceeding. The bar on these activities should extend to prosecuting patents that
cover the same subject matter of the patents-in-suit and the confidential technological
information produced in litigation.
5
District courts need not wait until the Federal Circuit resolves these splits or addresses
the loophole in its jurisprudence. As the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of
California has done, district courts can adopt a model protective order for patent cases
that bars risky prosecution activities. By treating the model protective order as
presumptively reasonable, district courts can effectively run an end-around Deutsche
Bank to have a functional patent prosecution bar.
Litigants may decry that such a general rule or model prosecution bar violates their right
to choice of counsel in a patent suit or before the Patent Office. That is incorrect. No
party has a right to an attorney positioned to use the confidential information of the
opposing party learned in one proceeding against that party in another. The law
generally places strict limitations on attorneys positioned to misuse another party’s
confidential information. For example, courts typically forbid an attorney from
representing a client when the matter positions that attorney to use confidential
information from a former client in a way that harms the former client. That same
principle should govern prosecution bars to ensure one litigant’s representatives do not
incorporate the other’s confidential ideas and technology in a patent and use the same
against the other party in a patent suit.
Bryan Choi, Separating Patent-Able from Patent Act
The patentable subject matter doctrine is a cornerstone of patent law, allowing courts to
disqualify patents as per se ineligible for protection. After decades of dormancy, the
doctrine has been abruptly revived by the Supreme Court. Caught off guard, many in the
patent community have criticized the judicial doctrine as dangerously unprincipled and
have sought to confine it to the more familiar contours of the Patent Act. Indeed,
"patentable subject matter" is commonly referred to as a § 101 issue, as though it were
principally a matter of statutory construction.
Yet, the proper understanding of the doctrine is that it constitutes independent exercise of
judicial power separate from the Patent Act. It is a constitutional doctrine—not a
statutory one—that checks legislative and executive power from exceeding the
authorization of the Progress Clause. As such, it is not a threshold "gatekeeper" inquiry,
but rather a parallel inquiry that owes no fealty or deference to the Patent Act.
The underlying quarrel is not that the patentable subject matter doctrine leads to bad
outcomes, but the fact that it disrupts settled assumptions regarding the supremacy of the
Patent Act. Those who have come to rely on the Patent Act as the first and final arbiter of
patent policy have good reason to find the patentable subject matter doctrine unsettling.
It restores an uninvited variable to the system: independent judicial authority to police
patent policy, not just rubberstamp it.
6
Patent Institutions / Policymaking
Sarah Rajec, Indisputable IP: Case Studies
The adversarial process is used to adjudicate the content and boundaries of rights in US
courts and some administrative agencies. In a typical patent case, for example, the court
hears arguments from opposing sides from which it can base determinations of patent
validity and scope, infringement, and remedies. In previous work, I described how in a
tribunal of steadily growing importance for intellectual property disputes—The
International Trade Commission (“ITC” or “Commission”)—certain cases proceed
without the benefit of participation from “both” sides. The procedures governing
investigations at the Commission may allow a patent holder to argue its preferred claim
construction, unopposed, and obtain an in rem, general exclusion order. Subsequently, in
challenges to Customs enforcement of Commission exclusion orders, an importer may
make arguments about infringement and previously undecided claim construction issues,
also unopposed. This phenomenon is troubling for its injustice, inefficiency, and potential
for incorrect decisions that have effects beyond the relevant parties. The nature of
intellectual property law is that incorrect decisions relating to claim scope may constrain
future innovators and harm consumer access interests.
This article examines a number of International Trade Commission investigations that
resulted in the in rem remedy of a general exclusion order to determine the strength of
these critiques. In particular, this article focuses on investigations where all named
respondents have been dismissed by the time the exclusion order issues, whether by
settlement, consent order, or default. In addition, the article assesses the timing of the
investigations and the depth of the claim construction orders and the need for further
claim construction at Customs, and outcomes of parallel district court proceedings.
Michael Goodman, Empirical Assessment of Judges’ Behavior
Patent law, perhaps the most “specialized” area of the law, is becoming more so in
recent years. While it has long been the case that to become a patent lawyer and practice
before the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, one must both have a particular technical
or scientific background as well as pass the rigorous patent bar, the courts wherein
patents are enforced and challenged have traditionally been the purview of generalist
lawyers and judges. But even outspoken critics of the specialization of courts have
generally agreed that in “complex areas” such as patent law, it may be useful to have
specialized courts. As a result, Congress responded to creating a specialized appellate
court to consider patent appeals in 1982, the Federal Circuit, and began implementation,
in 2011, of the Patent Pilot Program, the goal of which is to designate particular judges
to deal with patent cases at the trial level. The assumption underlying this trend toward
specialization of the courts is that judges with particular expertise will behave differently
than their non-specialist colleagues. That assumption has not, however, been empirically
validated. This project addresses the effect of the specialization of Federal Circuit
judges by looking at the relationship between those judges’ education and experience and
how they have decided cases over the last 30 years.
7
William Hubbard, Raising (or Razing?) the Patent Bar
In discussions of the social utility of the patent system, the benefits of competition and the
costs of limiting access have played increasingly important roles. Yet one aspect of the
patent system has largely escaped this competition-related scrutiny: the patent bar. The
paucity of scholarship in this area is surprising, given that nearly every patent is
obtained with substantial input from a member of the patent bar and that membership in
the patent bar is limited by a requirement that members possess formal education in
certain technological fields. Moreover, the patent bar is unusual in the patent system in
that membership does not require traditional legal training. Although patents convey
substantial legal rights, a law degree is neither necessary nor sufficient to be eligible to
join the patent bar. This Work-in-Progress analyzes from both theoretical and empirical
perspectives whether these features of the patent bar effectively promote social welfare.
In the theoretical portion, I will compare the stated justifications for the patent bar’s
eligibility requirements with the activities that members of the patent bar perform today,
including (1) prosecuting design patents, (2) prosecuting business method and software
patents, and (3) representing clients in administrative substitutes for litigation like inter
partes review, post grant review, and covered business method reviews. For the
empirical portion, I will compare the educational backgrounds of patent attorneys and
agents with the technologies covered by the patents that they prosecute. After assembling
an original dataset, I will assess the extent to which patent agents and patent attorneys
are using their undergraduate training to prosecute patents. I will also evaluate the
consequences of expanding patent-bar eligibility to allow lawyers without formal
technical education to join the patent bar.
Gregory Dolin, Dubious Patent Reform
The 2011 America Invents Act sought to drastically improve the American patent system
by creating new review processes for already issued patents. These processes were
meant to reduce patent litigation costs and clear the field of “dubious patents” all the
while increasing certainty in the existence and scope of patent rights. Though this was
not the first attempt to achieve these goals, Congress failed to heed the lessons of past
reforms or fully take into account the costs associated with these new post-issuance
review mechanisms. The result was a set of dubious reforms. This Article marshals
empirical data and case-study based evidence to show that the newly created system is
open to abuse, that such abuse in fact occurs, and that the costs that Congress ignored
are indeed substantial.
F. Scott Kieff (& Troy A. Paredes), Variations in Internal Government Structures
This paper will explore particular institutional and organizational differences among
agencies, commissions, and courts that oversee the fields of intellectual property,
antitrust, and finance. During the life of a patent, for example, a patent can pass from
its birth at the PTO, to review at the PTO, DoJ, FTC, ITC, District Court, or Federal
Circuit, and on to enforcement at the ITC, District Court, or Federal Circuit. Similarly,
investor protection and capital formation in the U.S are shaped in various ways as SEC
rules pass through the stages of drafting, promulgation, administration, and
8
enforcement. There is, of course, no single way to structure a government body; and
different government bodies behave differently because of different institutional
characteristics and decision-making dynamics. This paper will elucidate some key
variations in the internal structures and dynamics that determine how decisions are made
at agencies, commissions, and courts. In so doing, it will focus on responsiveness to
various inputs, such as established views of economic science, the factual record, and
governing law, as well as prevailing political and social currents. Our goal is to offer
insight into how regulation and adjudication work in practice with policy implications
for how to structure government bodies with rule-making and adjudicatory roles.
IP and the Internet
Lucille M. Ponte, Protecting Brand Image or Gaming the System?
Protecting Brand Image or Gaming the System? Consumer “Gag” Contracts in an Age
of Crowdsourced Ratings and Reviews. For decades, businesses sought to develop and
control brand image through company-sponsored advertising and marketing campaigns.
With the rise of social media, brand communications have become more interactive on
Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and a host of crowdsourced review sites, such as Yelp!,
TripAdvisor and Angie’s List. This increased interactivity has helped some businesses to
gain valuable insight into the consumer experience, to improve their brand image and to
strengthen customer engagement and long-term relationships. Businesses soon learned
that generating positive consumer ratings and reviews often translated into enhanced
brand reputation and increased revenues. In light of these incentives, some businesses
tried to burnish their brand image by paying for positive reviews while others sought to
silence disgruntled customers through adhesive “gag” contracts. These gag contracts
utilized reliance on dubious intellectual property claims, broad confidentiality clauses,
excessive monetary penalties, and other financial threats in order to prevent unhappy
consumers from posting negative reviews. Certain businesses justified these gag
contracts as legitimate actions needed to protect their brand and goodwill in a social
media environment fraught with fake negative reviews from unscrupulous competitors
and libelous consumers and flawed filtering and rating systems. This paper will examine
the rise of consumer gag contracts and consider the legality of such agreements in light
of basic principles of contract formation, unconscionability and public policy. This
article will conclude with regulatory and best practices proposals that seek to balance
customer speech interests with legitimate branding concerns.
Victoria Schwartz, Privacy Problems Start at the Top
With the rise of big data and privacy merchants, numerous corporations today are in the
actual business of privacy. Even corporations that are not directly in the privacy
business, however, still have significant power to make important decisions affecting the
privacy of their employees and consumers in a world of rapid technological advances.
There is a widespread belief among scholars and commentators that corporations do not
adequately protect privacy. For many corporations, privacy concerns were not even on
the radar as recently as a decade ago. To date, scholars have largely focused on a
9
consumer-driven market failure to explain this phenomenon. The conventional
explanation is that publicly traded companies respond to public demand, and as long as
consumers ignored privacy policies and otherwise failed to price their privacy
preferences, corporations responded accordingly. Scholars have offered numerous
private sector and regulatory solutions to remedy this market failure.
This paper contributes to the existing literature by adding to the existing consumer-
driven market failure explanation an additional corporation-side market distortion
explanation for why corporations do not adequately protect privacy. Extensive corporate
disclosure requirements, including the possibility of disclosure of executives’ personal
information combined with increased media interest in the personal lives of at least some
corporate executives, likely skew the selection of executives of public companies towards
individuals who do not highly value privacy. This sorting effect both directly impacts
obvious privacy policy decisions with regard to consumers and employees, but also may
cause the corporation to fail to recognize the presence of privacy concerns that are not
squarely presented.
Recognition of this privacy sorting market distortion as a piece of the picture allows a
shift away from a simplistic view of the corporate privacy problem as a consumer-driven
market failure to a more complex account that targets and accounts for the specific
market failures and distortions. The paper concludes by identifying a few possibilities
that can help offset the market distortion including allowing corporate executives to
negotiate their own disclosure policies, as well as including chief privacy officers as a
matter of good corporate governance in order to have someone within the corporate suite
whose job it is to think about and raise the privacy implications of various policies and
decisions.
Joseph Mtebe Tungaraza, Cybersquatting: the Relevance of the UDRP to Developing
Countries
Many states have enacted specific legislation regulating the use of domains and Cyber
Squatting. For example, the United States enacted the Anti Cyber Squatting Consumer
Protection Act, 1999. Many states, like Tanzania, do not have similar legislations in
place too. Unlike their developed countries counterparts, domain names has not been a
legal minefield attracting many suits or causes of action in developing countries such as
Tanzania.
Christine Davik, Access Granted: The Necessity of a Presumption of Public Access
under the CFAA and Beyond
Recently, there has been a significant increase in attempts to use the Computer Fraud
and Abuse Act (“CFAA”) to improperly control legitimate competition and innovation.
The CFAA has once again come under intense scrutiny at both the judicial and legislative
level due to a number of factors. Among them, is publicity surrounding the website
Craiglist and its controversial decision to file numerous lawsuits against entities that
accessed and utilized the non-copyrightable factual data contained within ads posted by
users to the site.
10
One of the central issues in these types of cases has been whether the CFAA should
apply when the owner of a publicly accessible website tries to restrict access to
particular entities. This often turns in part on whether breach of the terms of use
(“TOU”) on a publicly accessible website should even be the basis for a CFAA claim.
TOUs are ubiquitous on websites today and come in many different forms such as
browsewrap and clickwrap licenses. Particularly in light of the fact that the CFAA
provides for not only civil liability but criminal liability as well, the unrestricted ability of
a website owner to unilaterally dictate the terms regarding access and use of material on
a publicly accessible website is quite concerning. This is an area in which there is a split
among federal circuits at the moment. While the 9th Circuit recently ruled that violation
of a TOU cannot constitute a violation of the CFAA, it is clearly the outlier regarding
this matter as most other circuits, including the 5th, 7th, and 11th have taken the opposite
position.
Nonetheless, even if the CFAA were amended to provide that a TOU cannot be the basis
for a claim under the CFAA itself, the issue of contract liability separate and apart from
the CFAA still potentially remains. This is an area of contract law that is extremely
problematic, as with very few exceptions, courts have given the owners of publicly
available websites complete freedom to decide who or what may view and utilize the
information contained on the site, as well as how such restrictions are communicated to
the user. This is particularly concerning when the terms are clearly drafted in such a
way to prohibit legitimate competition and accordingly could negatively impact
innovation. I plan on exploring how the criteria for evaluating the enforceability of
restrictive covenants in the employment context might provide a more appropriate and
nuanced framework to analyze whether a TOU should likewise be enforced as drafted.
Trademark
Deborah Gerhardt (& Jon McClanahan), Colors
This Article empirically examines the use of colors in trademark applications. Working
from a wealth of data the USPTO released in 2012, we examine the twenty-five year
period of 1987-2012 to determine how marks that claimed color have fared in various
stages of the trademark application process. Using publication and registration rates as
our measures for success in the trademark prosecution process, we first look at success
rates of design marks compared to those that do not claim a design element. Next, we
identify the number of marks and the percentage that succeeded if they claimed color as
an element of design. In 1995, the Supreme Court decided Qualitex v. Jacobson
Products, and held that color alone may be protected as a trademark. To better
understand the impact of this decision, we examine how many marks are based on color
alone, and their success rates before the USPTO. For each category of applications—
design marks, color as an element of design, and color only marks—we identify the
primary barriers to publication and registration and the extent to which they impact
success rates. Finally, using abandonment data, we depict the longevity of marks in each
of these categories. Next, we consider the characteristics of the trademark applications
in which colors are claimed. Specifically, we identify the goods or services associated
with such marks, the types of entities who register such marks, and the degree to which
11
competitors are involved in the registration of and opposition to such marks. We also
evaluate the extent to which the concerns in Qualitex over “shade confusion” and “color
depletion” have been realized and how often color alone has been claimed and
registered as a trademark before the USPTO.
Jeanne Fromer (& Barton Beebe), The Closing of the Linguistic Frontier in
Trademark Law
American trademark law has long operated on the assumption that there exists an
inexhaustible supply of possible trademarks. With respect to word marks in particular,
the law has assumed that there will always be a reasonable supply of preexisting words
ripe for exploitation as trademarks and that in any case trademark adopters can simply
coin new words, the supply of which is assumed to be effectively infinite, to serve as
trademarks. In this paper, we present empirical evidence that fundamentally challenges
these assumptions. We use the U.S. PTO’s recently released Trademark Case Files
Dataset, consisting of information on 7.4 million trademark applications at the PTO
between 1870 and 2014, to show the surprisingly high proportion of English words
already registered as trademarks in the U.S. and the limited availability of possible
coinages not already identical or similar to registered word marks. The paper explores
the implications for trademark law and policy of this closing of the frontier of
trademarks.
Lisa Ramsey, Trademarking Everything? Why Brands Should Care About Limits on
Trademark Rights
For many businesses today, selecting an effective slogan, color, or design to use in
connection with an advertisement, product packaging, or the firm’s website or services
can be challenging because almost everything can be (and might already be) protected as
a trademark. For example, banks and other companies in the financial services industry
should be aware that, according to the “The Financial Brand” website, there are over a
thousand slogans and taglines that are being used by banks and credit unions. In
addition, Wells Fargo now claims trademark rights in the phrase “Envelope-Free” for its
ATMs, as indicated by its use of SM in “Envelope-Free SM ATMs” on its website.
Descriptive words and other informational phrases can be protected as a trademark if
they become distinctive, meaning that consumers now associate the language with a
single company that has used the mark in connection with the advertising and sale of its
goods or services. Single colors are also protected by trademark law if they have
acquired distinctiveness. For example, a German bank has a trademark registration for
a particular shade of the color red (fire-engine red) used in connection with banking
services in Germany, and has used its trademark rights to prevent other banks that use
this color in their logos or advertising materials from doing business in Germany. A
firm’s trademark attorneys should confirm which slogans and colors are “off limits” for
use in this industry, and also whether a competitor claims trademark rights in certain
website designs or the design or layout of its brick-and-mortar office. Apple obtained a
trademark registration for its retail store design, so banks could too if the design is
distinctive.
12
Many leading brands instinctively favor the expansion of trademark rights. They are
often the owners of several registered trademarks and may claim exclusive rights to a
variety of common law trademarks, including descriptive words, colors, product
configurations, scents, sounds, tastes, textures, and movements used in connection with
the advertising and sale of their goods or services. It is not surprising that brands are
seeking protection of such non-traditional trademarks in the United States, as the U.S.
Supreme Court held in Qualitex that the language in the federal trademark statute could
allow protection of “almost anything at all that is capable of carrying meaning.” While
there are some limits on what can be protected as a trademark, including the
distinctiveness requirement and categorical exclusions of some types of subject matter
(such as national flags), trademark offices and courts around the world are increasingly
protecting exclusive rights in informational language, colors, and product attributes in a
manner that may harm fair competition and the free flow of expression.
The goal of this project is to convince trademark owners, including the leading brands,
that limits on trademark rights will benefit them, and not just benefit start-up
competitors, critics, and commentators. After discussing various examples of how the
expansion of trademark law has caused problems for everyone ranging from large
corporations to small businesses, I will set forth the advantages and disadvantages of
various proposals for the reform of trademark laws from the perspective of established
trademark owners. Then I will discuss several ideas for encouraging brands to care more
about limits on trademark rights, and the best approach for achieving reforms of
trademark law that would likely be supported by trademark owners. It will be impossible
to implement pro-competitive and speech-protective reforms of domestic or international
trademark laws without the support of companies that currently own registered and
common law trademarks.
U. Shen Goh, Branding Linguistics: What do Coca-Cola and Chinese Bakeries Have
in Common?
The emergence of Chinese brands has become a global phenomenon. Not only are
Western businesses merging with and acquiring Chinese businesses, but Western
trademarks are engaging in brand extension or cross-branding with Chinese mark
owners. In doing so, unexpected language issues are being encountered that create
market confusion, cause inefficiencies, and increase costs.
The U.S. addressed these issues with the doctrine of foreign equivalents. Canada has no
such doctrine and continues to struggle with these issues. It decided in 1992 that two
competing bakeries could use the same Chinese language marks, and there would no
confusion since the average Canadian had no linguistic knowledge of Chinese. That same
year, The Coca-Cola Company abandoned all its Canadian registrations for Chinese
language marks. Then Canada decided in 2001 that the two competing bakeries could not
use the same Chinese language marks, and that there would be confusion since it took
judicial notice of a Chinese linguistic population in Canada. What led to this opposite
conclusion and what will it mean for The Coca-Cola Company?
13
This paper proposes as a solution to this conflict among Chinese language marks a
model that more realistically assesses the linguistic knowledge of the presumed
trademark consumer. Using Chinese language marks as a test case, it also develops a
method for filing and searching such marks that may suggest similar methods for
avoiding conflicts involving foreign language marks in general.
Abraham Bell (& Ted Sichelman & Gideon Parchomovsky), Trademarks as Club
Goods
The most commonly accepted justification for trademarks is that they lower costs to
consumers in identifying the source of a good, thereby allowing consumers to more
efficiently select those goods of with desired quality and characteristics. For instance, if
all bar soap were wrapped in a plain, white wrapper and labeled “soap,” it would be
impossible for consumers to distinguish quality and other characteristics (e.g.,
foaminess) among bars without the seller of the good providing information about
various batches of soap.
In our article, we offer an entirely different justification for trademarks, namely, that they
enable producers to create "club goods." Public goods are goods that are non-excludable
and non-rivalrous in consumption. Traditional economic theory holds that public goods
can never profitably be produced by a private producer, and that the state must therefore
supply public goods. A club good is a public good, but without the pure non-
excludability. A club good can be freely consumed by those in the club, but those outside
the club are excluded. Clubs will readily produce goods for their members, because they
can earn enough in club membership fees to justify the cost of production. Likewise,
producers will readily produce goods for clubs because the clubs can pay for the goods.
We show that one of the greatest values of trademark protection is trademark's use in
defining the boundaries of a club, and excluding consumption of a good outside the club.
The club good value of trademark is entirely distinct from its value in reducing search
costs, and it explains several features of trademark law that search cost explanations
cannot, such as the distinctive protection against dilution offered to famous marks.
14
Friday, February 6, 2015, Session 2: 11:00–12:20
Patent—Subject Matter
Christopher Cotropia, USPTO’s Patentable Subject-Matter Analysis After Alice
Since the Supreme Court's decision in Alice, more patents are being invalidated under §
101, both in district courts and the USPTO. And these decisions are citing and quoting
Alice in the process. However, simple observation of timing (post-Alice) and citation (to
Alice) in these decisions is not enough to fully comprehend what Alice has done. That is,
has Alice fundamentally changed the legal analysis regarding § 101 or did Alice merely
prompt a shift in attitude? In an attempt to more precisely measure what has changed
post-Alice, this Article will examine the USPTO’s patentable subject matter analysis in
Covered Business Method (“CBM”) petitions and proceedings. CBM review decisions
provide a fertile ground for such an examination given the subject matter of the patents
at issue and the availability of § 101 to requesters. Accordingly, content analysis will be
performed on all CBM decisions, both prior to and after Alice, to quantify any change in
the USPTO's doctrinal approach to § 101 questions. Such analysis should shed light on
what Alice actually changed and the specific direction in which § 101 is headed.
Shubha Ghosh, Demarcating Nature After Myriad
The United States Supreme Court in its Myriad decision affirmed the existence of a
borderline between unpatentable natural phenomena and potentially patentable
inventions. However, the Court cribbed a few pages from standard biotechnology to lay
out the contours of this boundary without appeal to patent law or policy. As a result,
courts have read the exclusion from patenting quite broadly in subsequent cases, such as
in Ariosa involving fetal DNA and in the recent Roslin Institute decision involving clones.
While some may welcome this broad limitation on patenting life forms, the lack of a clear
policy is worrisome for two reasons. The first has to do with arguments that US courts
have undermined their credibility by assuming broad discretion, at the expense of expert
agencies, in reviewing questions of science and patent law. Labels like anti-patent
subvert any claim to principle. This first problem reverberates with a second class of
problems: collateral limitations on patenting in the area of infringement and in
competition policy. In the same term that the Court limited patents on naturally occurring
DNA, it also held in Bowman v. Monsanto that planting a patented seed constitutes
patent infringement. This decision ignored the natural processes of reproduction and
regeneration and subsumed them under the patent claims. Furthermore, the Court has
moved towards finding competition limitations on the scope of patents in its Actavis
decision, published a few weeks before its Myriad decision. While the Court attempted to
articulate the policies of competition law that limit patents in the Acatavis case, the Court
has not recognized the competition issues that arise in the biological sciences when the
nature meets the marketplace. This paper revisits the Myriad decision and seeks to do
what the Court failed to do, namely articulate the policy basis for separating natural
phenomena from patentable subject matter and identify how these policy limitations
apply to issues of infringement and competition policy.
15
Dmitry Karshtedt, The Completeness Requirement in Patent Law
This Article argues that courts have created a de facto extra- statutory condition of
patentability, herein termed the “completeness” requirement, which bars patents on
certain inventions whose chief value lies in their function as inputs into downstream
research. The Article contends that the notion of completeness explains doctrinal
innovations that are difficult to rationalize any other way. The Article also argues that,
although it reflects the important policy of limiting unduly preemptive patent claims on
foundational, building-block inventions, the completeness requirement in its current form
nonetheless fails to implement this policy in a way that is coherent and consistent with
patent law’s utilitarian goals. In addition, courts’ attempts to develop the completeness
requirement based on existing statutory provisions have resulted in controversial
interpretations of the Patent Act, creating legitimacy costs.
The Article argues that these problems are best addressed by explicitly recognizing
completeness as a separate requirement of patentability and modifying the doctrinal tools
that are used to enforce it. In order to determine whether a patent claim passes this
requirement, a new test is proposed that focuses on the generality and unpredictability of
a claimed invention’s applications. The Article further contends that an amendment to
the Patent Act codifying the requirement of completeness is probably the most effective
way to implement the proposal. In addition, the Article explores the possibility of
awarding a limited patent right to claims that satisfy existing requirements of
patentability, but fail completeness. The right, herein termed “Research Patent,” would
provide the intellectual property incentives that are likely needed to develop and
commercialize foundational inventions, but help decrease the potential for stifling
downstream innovation caused by granting full patent protection to such inventions.
Stefania Fusco, The Venetian Republic’s Tailoring of Patent Protection to the
Characteristics of the Invention
In 1474, the Venetian Republic enacted what is widely recognized to be the first Patent
Act in the world. Legal scholars have generally assumed that after this time, patents were
granted in Venice based on this Act, or in other words, based on Venice’s statutory
patent system. This is because they relied on the writings of historians and political
scientists who did not have legal training, and who, consequently, missed many of the
legal nuances of the Venetian patent system. In fact, up to now, only two other legal
scholars have examined the original Venetian patents. In this article I use original
documents from the Venetian State Archives to present a detailed account of how the
Venetian Republic used its customary patent system to tailor protection to the
characteristics of the invention. The Venetian patent system appears to have produced a
number of positive outcomes. As a result of its patent system, Venice transformed from a
nation of sailors, to a nation of artisans and engineers, becoming the center of
technological development in 16th century Europe. Thus, the Venetian customary patent
system is an important example of how tailored patent protection can be provided. The
accurate description of this system is crucial to further understanding the specific steps
that we would need to take to achieve this goal today.
16
Patent Value / Remedies
Jonathan H. Ashtor, Redefining “Valuable Patents”
This study analyzes the factors that make patents valuable, and it aims to redefine the
term “valuable patents” as it has been widely used in prior theory and practice. Leading
scholarship predominantly relies on proxies for value (e.g., whether a patent has been
asserted or maintained) to designate which patents are “valuable” and which are not.
Here we study value more precisely, identifying the specific characteristics that are
associated with higher or lower enforcement values and the quantitative relationship
each factor has with the amount of such value. In so doing, we identify previously
unobserved categories of patent enforcement value and shed new light on the principal
defining characteristics of “valuable patents.”
Specifically, we mine a vast array of data relating to each patent that has been held valid
and infringed in each U.S. District Court case from 2006 to 2011. The dataset comprises
nearly 400 patents from over 200 cases awarding infringement damages during this six-
year timeframe. For each patent, over 70 unique data points are coded, including
variables regarding prosecution history, inventor expertise, specification and claim
structure, patent family tree, forward citations and recorded transfers and liens, as well
as characteristics of the litigants and claims in each case. Using this extensive dataset,
we conduct correlation and regression analyses to identify the key factors that are
associated with valuable patents.
Based on this analysis, we redefine “valuable patents” as, in order of importance: (1)
practiced patents, (2) upstream patents, and (3) to a somewhat lesser extent, forward-
cited patents. We further articulate distinctions between enforcement value and other
types of patent value, such as licensing or transaction value. These findings thus provide
new insights into patent value and inform patent valuation metrics, and they lay
groundwork for future research.
David Abrams, Patent Value and Citations
Prior work suggests that more valuable patents are cited more and this view has become
standard in the empirical innovation literature. Using an NPE-derived dataset with
patent-specific revenues we find that the relationship of citations to value in fact forms an
inverted-U, with fewer citations at the high end of value than in the middle. Since the
value of patents is concentrated in those at the high end, this is a challenge to both the
empirical literature and the intuition behind it. We attempt to explain this relationship
with a simple model of innovation, allowing for both productive and strategic patents. We
find evidence of greater use of strategic patents where it would be most expected: among
corporations, in fields of rapid development, in more recent patents and where divisional
and continuation applications are employed. These findings have important implications
for our basic understanding of growth, innovation, and intellectual property policy.
17
Jonathan Masur, The Misuse of Prior Licenses in Setting Patent Damages
Courts that must determine reasonable royalty patent damages—when a patent plaintiff
cannot or will not prove lost profits—have largely floundered due to the absence of
reliable information and the hypothetical nature of the questions the court must answer.
Amidst these difficulties, courts have often turned to existing licenses, either granted by
the plaintiff or paid for by the defendant, as evidence of the proper measure of damages.
Reliance on existing licenses has become even more prominent in recent years. But the
use of these licenses carries with it several different and potentially insuperable
problems. It introduces a circularity into damage calculations: licenses are based upon
expected litigation outcomes, and litigation outcomes are based upon licenses. It relies
upon unknowable private information held only by the parties to the original license:
what was the likelihood that the patent would be held to be valid and infringed? And it
encourages strategic behavior involving third parties that can distort licensing prices:
patent holders have incentives to artificially inflate licensing prices in order to increase
their returns to litigation. There is real doubt as to whether market licenses can ever be
useful evidence of reasonable royalty damages.
Chris Seaman, Property v. Liability Rules in Patent Litigation Post E-Bay
In this project, I seek to empirically assess the impact of the Supreme Court’s decision in
eBay, Inc. v. MercExchange, LLC, 547 U.S. 388 (2006), on grants of permanent
injunctions or, in the alternative, ongoing royalty awards, in patent litigation.
Prior to eBay, the Federal Circuit established a “general rule” granting injunctive relief
after entry of a final judgment that the asserted patent was valid and infringed. Id. at
391. Overcoming this presumption required a significant showing of public harm that
outweighed the patentee’s irreparable harm. In practice, however, this rarely occurred,
and district courts routinely granted injunctions after a finding of infringement.
In eBay, the Supreme Court unanimously rejected the Federal Circuit’s “general rule” in
favor of injunctive relief, instead holding that trial courts must apply “traditional
equitable principles” in the form of a four-factor test. Id. at 391-94. However, in their
concurring opinions, Chief Justice Roberts and Justice Kennedy offered seemingly
divergent assessments regarding eBay’s likely impact in patent litigation. Chief Justice
Roberts suggested that trial courts would continue to grant injunctive relief after a
finding of infringement in “the vast majority of patent cases,” id. at 395, whereas Justice
Kennedy asserted that injunctive relief may be inappropriate in situations that differed
from traditional patent litigation, such as suits by non-practicing entities (NPEs) and
cases involving business method patents. Id. at 396.
To test these predictions, as well as several other hypotheses about the nature and
frequency of injunctive relief post-eBay, I am empirically studying all district court
decisions where the patentee requested a permanent injunction following a finding of
infringement (excluding uncontested injunctions) from the date of the eBay
18
IP and Development
Alexandra George, Spiritual Property: Indigenous Knowledge Systems in an
Intellectual Property Environment
For some years, the World Intellectual Property Organization’s (‘WIPO’)
Intergovernmental Committee on Genetic Resources, Traditional Knowledge and
Folklore (‘IGC’) has been working towards concluding a treaty to protect the traditional
knowledge and cultural heritage of indigenous peoples. Negotiations have been
somewhat fraught as participants seek to identify the objects of regulation and design of
a system by which such regulation could occur.
Informed by literature examining the construction of Western intellectual property law
and social systems, and using several examples as case studies, this paper explores the
treaty-making process from a theoretical perspective.
Considering contentious issues from a ‘systems theory’ perspective, the paper draws a
distinction between the nature and role of ‘intellectual property’ within a Western legal
framework verses the nature and role of ‘traditional knowledge’ within indigenous
knowledge systems. This analysis offers insights that may be useful when trying to design
frameworks for the recognition and protection of indigenous knowledge
systems/traditional knowledge alongside Western intellectual property laws.
Margo Bagley, Of Indigenous Group “Straws” and Developed Country “Camels”:
Patents, Innovation, and the Disclosure of Origin requirement
This Essay explores the assertion, by many developed country representatives, that the
adoption of a patent applicant genetic resource disclosure of origin (DOO) requirement,
such as the one being considered in the World Intellectual Property Organization
(WIPO) Intergovernmental Committee (IGC) negotiations, will impose untenable,
innovation-deterring burdens and legal uncertainty on the global patent system. It also
considers such a disclosure requirement in comparison to other burdens/uncertainties in
the U.S. patent system, and in the context of EU ratification of the Nagoya Protocol, and
concludes that, far from being the straw that may break the camel’s back, a DOO
requirement may enhance innovation in the U.S., Europe, and beyond.
Joy Y. Xiang, Addressing Climate Change: IP, No IP, or Another Possibility?
Climate change is an essential issue that the global community is addressing
together. Scientific research has established climate change largely is induced by
excessive greenhouse gases emitted by human activities—e.g., those occurred during the
industry development era. Clean technologies (i.e., technologies necessary for adapting
to and mitigating climate change) play a key role in the solution for climate change. The
global development and diffusion of clean technologies is critically important, as the
impact of greenhouse gas emissions hence climate change has no geographic limitation.
19
Yet, a gridlock has been persisting in the recent rounds of climate change negotiations at
the United Nations, caused by diverging views regarding the role of intellectual property
rights (“IPRs”) in the development and diffusion of clean technologies. The North (i.e.,
the developed nations) insists on strong IP protection for clean technologies, while the
South (i.e., the developing nations), charging IPR to be the major barrier for
international transfer of clean technologies, asks for no or weakened IPRs for clean
technologies. Hence, this paper takes on the exploration of two questions: 1) Why is
international transfer of clean technologies not working well and is IPR the major
barrier; and 2) how to facilitate the needed global development and diffusion of clean
technologies.
Analyzing data such as three global surveys on patent ownerships and international
transfer of key clean technologies, as well as reviewing nations’ own assessments on
what constitute major barriers for development and deployment of clean technologies,
this paper tries to understand the reasons behind the insufficient international transfer of
clean technologies. Based on such an understanding, this paper proceeds to explore an
alternative model for addressing climate change via the development and diffusion of
clean technologies. This model emphasizes innovation, technology collaboration, and
international aid, rather than international transfer of clean technologies.
This model suggests that, instead of focusing on transfer of clean technologies from the
North to the South, we focus on: 1) both the North and the South stimulating domestic
innovations on clean technologies—this includes both the North and the South
customizing its IP systems and leveraging diverse innovation tools to facilitate
development in clean technologies; 2) the North and the South constructing technology
collaboration platforms that would benefit both parties; and 3) the North continuing the
actualization of its commitment in providing financial and technical aids to the South,
while the South developing sustainable national capacities that would attract
international transfer of clean technologies.
Trademark
Jeremy Sheff, The Ragged Edge of the Lanham Act
Recent cases are exposing an unstable boundary between the administrative and judicial
provisions of the Lanham Act. Fault lines along this boundary include the relationship
between the criteria for registrability under Section 2 and the criteria for enforceability
under Section 43(a), standing and justiciability issues arising under the peculiar judicial
review provisions of Section 21, and the applicability of principles of deference and
preclusion in disputes that spawn successive proceedings before both the TTAB and the
courts. This paper explores these areas of doctrinal instability and argues that they arise
out of both poor legislative draftsmanship and some fundamental and unresolved
questions about the trademark system. Specifically, these doctrinal puzzles reflect
ambivalence as to whether registration is substantive or procedural, uncertainty over the
role and prerogatives of the PTO as a matter of administrative law, and the absence of a
coherent normative basis for registration in particular or unfair competition law in
general.
20
Rebecca Tushnet, Registering Discontent
Trademark scholars widely agree that our current system for evaluating what rights a
trademark owner should have over others’ uses of their (or similar) marks is badly
broken. Trademark practitioners, meanwhile, while regularly quite approving of broad
interpretations of trademark law, widely recognize that our trademark registration
system has significant problems. Among other things, a pilot study recently showed that
registrants overclaimed the goods and services on which they used marks in nearly two-
thirds of registrations: they told the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (PTO) that they
were using marks on goods when they weren’t. In thirteen percent of the examined cases
they weren’t using the marks at all. “Intent to use” applications also generate
significant numbers of paper rights with no ultimate legal existence. This “deadwood”
on the register prevents legitimate users from knowing what they can and can’t do;
improperly granted registrations are harmful even from the perspective of the greatest
trademark expansionists. What we haven’t done is try to unite concerns over
infringement doctrine with concerns over registration and explain their relationship to
each other.
Consider: If the mark “Redskins” for a football team is disparaging and its trademark
registration therefore invalid, can trademark law nonetheless protect the team against
unauthorized uses of the term? This question became more than theoretical when the
Trademark Trial and Appeal Board recently upheld the invalidation of the Redskins
registrations, a ruling now on appeal and likely headed to the Supreme Court. Or
suppose the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (PTO) determines that, in the abstract, an
applied-for trademark is likely to cause confusion with another previously registered
mark. If the applicant decides to use the mark anyway, without a registration, should the
PTO’s determination bind a federal court asked to determine whether the new mark, as
actually used, causes confusion with that previously registered mark? The Supreme
Court is poised to decide this issue in the coming Term.
These questions, and a number of others, highlight the need for renewed attention to
trademark registration as such. More than seventy years after the modern federal
trademark statute was enacted, we have lost sight of the initial concept of registration—a
benefit accorded to a specific subclass of protectable marks—and have not replaced it
with anything coherent. The result is a system that is half reliant on legal fictions and
half reliant on attempts to engage in empirical fact-finding, and which dominates
depends on the day and the court. There are three interrelated tensions in current law:
the goals of trademark in protecting consumers from confusion and helping producers
structure their behavior; the difference between the standard for registrability and the
standard for finding likely confusion in the marketplace; and the difference between the
treatment of registered and unregistered marks. None of these tensions can be entirely
resolved to favor only one side. But by understanding their relationship, we may be able
to improve the system.
21
Megan Carpenter, “Behind the Music”: Lanham Act 2(a)
Lanham Act 2(a) bars trademark registration for certain marks, including marks that are
scandalous and immoral. This paper provides an empirical look at trademark
registration rejections under Lanham Act 2(a), in an effort to understand the context of
these rejections. I consider such questions as: What evidence is being used by examiners
as the basis for these rejections? How frequent are Office Action Responses filed by
applicants? Does the rejection impact use of the mark? And, to what extent is market
context a consideration? The paper is a follow-up to a symposium piece I authored for
the Louisville Law Review. It concludes that examining attorneys are not applying the
standard in an effective way, and argues that a consideration of contextual factors, like
those considered in the likelihood of confusion analysis, would result in a more effective
application of 2(a).
Cathay Y. N. Smith, The Life and Death of a Scandalous Mark
This project will take an empirical approach to analyze U.S. trademark law’s prohibition
of the registration of “immoral” or “scandalous” trademarks, in order to determine
whether this prohibition has the practical effect of limiting actual use of immoral or
scandalous marks in commerce and chilling scandalous or immoral commercial speech.
A trademark application in the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office may be denied on the
basis that the mark consists of or comprises “immoral” or “scandalous” matter.
Specifically, Section 2(a) of U.S. Trademark Law, 15 U.S.C. 1052(a) states that “[n]o
trademark … shall be refused registration on the principal register on account of its
nature unless it—(a) Consists of or comprises immoral … or scandalous matter…”
(hereinafter, the “Scandalous Provision”). The Scandalous Provision is an absolute bar
to registration of “immoral” or “scandalous” marks. The USPTO has used the
Scandalous Provision to deny registration of trademarks, and interested third-parties
have used the Scandalous Provision as a basis to oppose trademark applications and
seek to cancel existing trademark registrations in the USPTO.
There are a number of typical criticisms of the Scandalous Provision. The Scandalous
Provision may abridge a person’s First Amendment interest in freedom of speech. This
First Amendment argument, however, was considered and rejected by the Federal Circuit
in two separate cases on the ground that the USPTO’s failure to register a trademark
does not prevent the applicant’s right to actually use the trademark in commerce. The
Scandalous Provision has also been criticized because it may fail to eliminate
immoral/scandalous commercial speech, because applicants are still permitted to use a
scandalous mark even after denial, and—because of the limit in protection—the
Scandalous Provision may actually have the opposite effect of allowing more people or
companies to use same or similar scandalous trademarks. Furthermore, based on a
marketplace theory, society should be free to decide, with their wallets, whether a
company’s trademark is truly offensive. If consumers find a mark too offensive or
scandalous, they will avoid the company or its products, and the company will be forced
to change its scandalous trademark or fail.
22
The purpose of this project is to use an empirical approach to collect and interpret data
relating to the current statuses of trademarks that were denied registration under the
Scandalous Provision between December 5, 1996 and August 1, 2014. The trademarks
examined would be limited to those rejected by the USPTO under the Scandalous
Provision, and subsequently had such rejection affirmed by the TTAB and/or the Federal
Circuit. The questions that this project will attempt to answer is whether denial of a
trademark registration under the Scandalous Provision in fact leads a trademark
applicant to abandon use of its immoral or scandalous mark, or whether trademark
applicants continue to use and succeed in using immoral or scandalous marks in
commerce despite the USPTO’s and TTAB/Federal Circuit’s rejections. This project is
significant as it will attempt to use actual data to determine whether the Scandalous
Provision is having the USPTO/government’s intended effect of limiting
scandalous/immoral marks in commerce. It will also utilize factual data to lend support
to or disavow some of the typical arguments and theories articulated in support of or
against the Scandalous Provision.
23
Friday, February 6, 2015, Session 3: 2:00–3:20
Patent—Claims
Adam Mossoff, O’Reilly v. Morse
O’Reilly v. Morse (1854) is a famous patent case. It is relied on by Justices and judges,
discussed by scholars, and taught to students. Everyone agrees it was correctly decided:
Chief Justice Roger Taney’s majority opinion stopped Samuel Morse’s attempt to control
all telecommunication technologies with a patent that went far beyond his invented
telegraph and encompassed modern email, fax machines and text messages. This
conventional wisdom, however, is profoundly mistaken. It fails to account for the
historical context in which Morse invented, patented, commercialized and ultimately was
swept up in massive litigation over his innovative telegraph.
This paper reinserts the full historical context back into our understanding of the Morse
decision. It details the invention and innovative commercial development of the
telegraph, and it reveals that Chief Justice Taney’s opinion was not a sterling exemplar
of patent law. Similar to his decisions in constitutional law and in other patent cases,
Chief Justice Taney ignored established patent doctrines and instead decided the case on
the basis of his own political biases. As a fervent Jacksonian Democrat, Chief Justice
Taney viewed patents as state-granted monopolies, and not as property rights in
technological innovation. It is only a happy accident for Taney that his judicial activism
in the Morse case comports with much-later changes in patent law that made his opinion
appear correct to our modern eyes — unlike Chief Justice Taney’s similar twisting of
established law in other constitutional cases to reach results dictated by his personal
political preferences.
Joseph Scott Miller, Reasonably Certain Notice
In the Nautilus case, the Supreme Court held “that a patent is invalid for indefiniteness if
its claims … fail to inform, with reasonable certainty, those skilled in the art about the
scope of the invention.” 134 S. Ct. 2120, 2124. We do not require perfect clarity because,
as the Festo case highlighted, patentees can’t achieve it. We do not accept post hoc
judicial salvage operations because, as the 1930s and 1940s functional-claiming cases
highlighted, others can’t adequately plan around it. Reasonably certain notice, then, is
just right: § 112 “require[s] that a patent’s claims, viewed in light of the specification
and prosecution history, inform those skilled in the art about the scope of the invention
with reasonable certainty.” Id. at 2129. How then, should the Patent Office and the
courts determine whether claim language provides reasonably clear notice, for the
protection of patentee and public alike? Reasonableness, a concept that pervades law,
looks for the fit between means and ends and depends on the particular circumstances.
This paper explores the contours of reasonably certain notice, using insights gleaned
from other legal domains requiring reasonable notice, including matters as diverse as
Due Process cases, class action practice under Rule 23, and qualified immunity in civil
rights cases. All indicate that, to fairly judge the reasonableness of the notice that claim
language provides, we must contextualize the claim language with far more robust data
24
about typical language usage in a given art at a given time than we currently consider.
Happily, linguistics tools are readily available for analyzing usage in a large text
corpora, and indefiniteness challenges are bound to call them into use.
Oskar Liivak, The Unresolved Ambiguity of Patent Claims
(http://ssrn.com/abstract=2559958)
For well over a hundred years patent claims have been at the center of every patent
related issue. Yet, what exactly does a patent claim claim? Exactly what type of thing is
claim language intended to communicate? Despite their importance, patent law is
confused about this central question. Some think of claims in the sense of “I claim to
have invented the following things” while others think of them in the sense of “I claim
exclusionary dominion over the following things.” These two views communicate quite
different information and it impacts both substantive and procedural patent law.
Generally, there is agreement about the legal effect of patent claims. Ultimately, in both
views, patent claims determine a patent’s exclusion. But, how and why we move from
claim text to exclusion differs considerably. The Federal Circuit, increasingly the
Supreme Court, and patent scholars are all aiming to improve claim clarity yet all those
efforts may prove fruitless unless this underlying ambiguity is first acknowledged and
resolved. There cannot be clear and consistent patent discourse until the fundamental
nature of patent claims is resolved. For example, In The Interpretation-Construction
Distinction in Patent Law, Lawrence Solum and Tun-Jen Chiang take on some of the
knotty linguistic problems associated with patent claims. Though I think the linguistic
tools they develop are useful contributions, they failed to thoughtfully deploy them in
patent law. Most importantly, they missed this unresolved, ongoing ambiguity in the
linguistic meaning of claims. They simply presumed that the only way to understand
claims is as direct delineations of patent exclusion. As a result their ultimate conclusions
are premature if not mistaken. This response aims to first highlight this ambiguity and
then it aims to resolve it. Once the confusion is understood, then it is clear that, though
the legal effect of claims is to delineate exclusion, the only reasonable understanding of
the linguistic meaning of claims is as “I claim to have invented the following things.”
Prof. Dr.-Ing. Sigram Schindler, Quantification of Inventive Concepts
This tutorial to “post-Alice patent-(non)eligibility” of an Emerging Technology Claimed
Invention (ET CI) elaborates on the Supreme Court’s paradigm change as to its
Substantive Patent Law (SPL) testing. This paradigm change enables any
inventor/investor to protecting their high risk investments into ET R&D by much more
robust patents than hitherto possible. They may achieve this gross increase of robustness
of their patent on an ET CI by exactly defining and quantifying its inventive concept. The
Supreme Court stepwise developed this fundamental notion of “quantifiable inventive
concept” since KSR, over Bilski/Mayo/Myriad/Biosig, now having culminated in Alice.
This tutorial provides a simple introduction to this fundamental notion of quantifiable
inventive concept, as developed in the FSTP project (= facts screening, transforming,
presenting) induced by the Supreme Court’s Mayo decision.
25
Patent Presumptions / Procedure
Jeremy Bock, An Error-Cost Assessment of the Presumption of Validity
In every trial involving a validity issue, a validity baseline specific to that case will be
established based on the information presented to the jury. For example, an express jury
instruction on the presumption of validity is optional under Federal Circuit law, such that
by deciding to include (or exclude) an instruction on the presumption, a trial judge is
establishing a particular validity baseline that may render it more (or less) difficult to
prove invalidity. Prior to and during trial, a district judge has multiple opportunities for
exercising discretion in (dis)allowing certain information to be presented to the jury. I
argue that this baseline-setting mechanism is a policy lever that should be operated with
reference to the relative social costs of erroneously invalidating patent claims (Type I
errors) versus erroneously confirming their validity (Type II errors).
Irina D. Manta (& Gregory Dolin), Taking Presumptions
For many years, a number of congressmen, academics, and judges have argued that the
U.S. patent system is in trouble. The reasons for the problems were seen as twofold.
First, the inundation of the system with “low-quality” patents created uncertainty about
the legal status of the rights secured by the patents for both patentees and the public.
Second, this vagueness of the scope of rights was used by the unscrupulous patentees to
“extort” licensing fees from the industry in exchange for foregoing costly, and possibly
ruinous litigation. After nearly a decade of debate, Congress came up with a solution
that sought to solve both the quality and the high cost problems. In enacting the Leahy-
Smith America Invents Act, Congress created new procedures within the Patent Office
which would allow anyone to challenge the validity of an issued patent. Although these
procedures look in many respects like a trial (with depositions, evidence, and a hearing),
they fundamentally differ from what happens in federal court. The most important
difference is that the statutory presumption of validity that attaches to all issued patents,
and can only be overcome by clear and convincing evidence, does not apply. Indeed, no
presumptions apply at all beyond the traditional requirement inherent in all legal matters
that he who brings a case must shoulder the burden of proof. The AIA made this new
regime applicable to patents that issued after the enactment of the bill, but also to all
patents that had already been issued and were still within their enforceability period.
Shubha Ghosh, What Makes a Case Exceptional? Fee Shifting as a Policy Lever
The Supreme Court's recent decision in Octane Fitness overruled the Federal Circuit's
2005 decision in Brooks Furniture, raising the standard for when a patent case is
exceptional for the purposes of fee shifting. The current standard seems to be the one
used by courts before the Brooks Furniture decision. This paper empirically examines
how courts determined when a patent case was exceptional in the 2005-2013 period
when the Brooks Furniture decision was the standard and in the 1982-2005 period, post
founding of the Federal Circuit and pre-Brooks Furniture. The author has coded the
published and unpublished district court opinions during these two periods and
developed a statistical model to determine what variables were important for the district
26
court in awarding fees to the prevailing party. Variables measure the status of the
parties, the type of patent, the existence of repeat players, and indicators associated with
"patent trolls" of various sorts. The author also looks to see how the district court
opinions were reviewed by the Federal Circuit. By placing the empirical study in the
broader development of attorney's fee shifting in patent law, the author makes some
preliminary assessments of the efficacy of using fee shifting as a policy lever.
Greg Reilly, Patent Discovery: A Study in Litigation Reform
Proposed amendments to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure to make discovery more
“proportional” have provoked extensive public debate and opposition. Yet, Congress is
considering far more fundamental discovery reforms, including reversing the 75-year old
presumption that the responding party bear its own costs. These reforms have been
largely overlooked simply because they are limited to one subject matter: patent
litigation.
Discovery in patent cases is often seen as unique. It is said to be more extensive, more
expensive, and more burdensome than in other civil litigation. These assumptions, and
self-interested lobbying, are the impetus for the patent-specific discovery reform
proposals in Congress and the courts. Yet, no serious analysis of patent discovery exists.
What is the problem? Is it really different than in other civil litigation? What are its
causes? What are the possible solutions? Do current reform proposals make sense?
This Article offers the first academic analysis of these questions.
For the patent community, the Article disputes conventional wisdom that patent discovery
is different in kind from other civil litigation. Instead, the problems are more extreme
versions of those with civil discovery generally. It also rejects the popular view that
patent discovery problems result from the abusive tactics of “patent trolls.” Rather than
“patent trolls” or even the technical complexity of patent cases, the most likely cause of
disproportionally high patent discovery costs is complex and open-ended remedial
doctrines for determining damages and “willful” infringement.
Perhaps it is time to reconsider whether the remedial precision supposedly offered by
these doctrines justifies the costs they impose. Alternatively, patent litigation could be
bifurcated into liability and remedial phases in its entirety, not just for trial. This would
limit the most costly and burdensome discovery to the most meritorious cases. By
contrast, current reform proposals would burden even the most meritorious claims based
on concerns about the costs of defending against weak claims.
For those interested in litigation reform generally, the analysis of patent discovery offers
three lessons. First, the high costs of modern litigation result not just from the design of
procedural devices, as is often assumed, but also from the nature of the governing
substantive law. Second, if litigation cost-savings cannot be targeted at the weakest
claims, as they cannot in patent litigation because of the difficulty of evaluating the
merits at the outset, they will be achieved through across-the-board cuts that burden even
the most meritorious claims. This calls into question the opposition by those who support
access to justice and plaintiffs’ interests to procedures that screen out weaker claims
27
earlier in litigation, such as heightened pleading standards. Third, broad substantive
rights can be preserved, plaintiffs’ interests protected, and litigation costs reduced by a
greater use of staged litigation—resolving the merits of some issues before proceeding in
any way with the remaining issues.
International / Cross-Border
Franck Gloglo, Exceeding the National Boundaries of IP Rights in Light of the WTO
The WTO Law consists of three major founding agreements, the GATT of 1994, the GATS,
and the TRIPS Agreement, and an authoritative mechanism for strengthening these
agreements led by the dispute settlement body (DSB). Prior to the WTO, many other
international covenants dealt with IPRs issues, in order to obtain a minimal degree of
harmony among specific domestic intellectual property law. However, the problem with
these several existing conventions was their lack of authority in ensuring their member
States’ compliance and the absence of an effective dispute settlement mechanism. The
theoretical case for stronger IPRs that the TRIPS agreement stands for, has shifted away
national boundaries and reduced countries’ power over their domestic intellectual
property policy, without dealing with issues such as sovereignty, diversity, and legitimacy
that pervade international relations. In fact, where prescriptive power resides in the
TRIPS agreement, that power is typically the authority to set boundaries within which a
WTO’s Member can act rather than to impose a specific rule of law. This paper seeks to
show the interest of the agreement for the global market, and prospect whether
institutional changes are necessary.
Sapna Kumar, Policing Digital Trade
Recorded history shows that people have engaged in international trade for more than
5000 years. Both contracts and customary practice gradually shaped modern trade law
over goods. However, the rapid rise of internet-based digital trade has forced laws to
adapt without the wisdom of historical practice. Copyright law was the first to change, as
digital files began to replace compact discs, DVDs, and books. But until recently, patent
law and trade law remained stagnant. Technology has only just begun to enable people
to infringe patents with nothing more than electronic blueprints and a 3D printer.
Because blueprints can be sold and electronically transmitted across borders,
international trade laws are also implicated.
Under the Tariff Act, the International Trade Commission (ITC) has jurisdiction over
articles that enter the country and infringe intellectual property. Recently, the ITC has
vastly expanded its powers, asserting jurisdiction over imported data that infringes IP
rights. Although the ITC currently lacks the power to block digital information before it
enters the country, there have been attempts to expand the agency’s jurisdiction. This
poses disturbing implications regarding the breadth of the ITC’s jurisdiction. This Article
examines how laws can be adapted or changed to protect IP holders without stifling
digital trade, invading our privacy, or violating protected speech rights under the First
Amendment.
28
Elizabeth Winston, Patent Boundaries
A patent grants a limited right to exclude others from practicing an invention within the
United States, its territories and possessions. Much has been written about the limits of
the patent grant and how to determine what the protected invention may be. At the same
time, scholars have not systemically analyzed the geographic limitations of United States
patents, a critical component of a patentee’s limited right. A patent’s geographical scope
is not simple to discern. Commentators have neither analyzed the patent boundaries
collectively nor delineated the scope of patent sovereignty on land, in the air and at sea.
Patent law is territorial. Technology is not. Addressing the previously unappreciated
ambiguity in patent law’s geographic definition of its boundaries requires understanding
the flaws in the current codification of patent law. It is time to delineate and codify the
United States patent boundaries.
David S. Levine, Temporal Transparency and the Process of Intellectual Property
Lawmaking
The problem of public input, or the lack thereof, has permeated the negotiating process
for the Trans Pacific Partnership Agreement (TPP) and Transatlantic Trade and
Investment Partnership (TTIP), and particularly the highly-controversial intellectual
property chapters. The primary reason for this lack of input is the pervasive secrecy that
has characterized the process, where after five years of negotiation, not even a formal
draft text has officially seen the light of day. This article addresses the purported need
for that ironclad secrecy in the TPP negotiations and its impact on the often-used but
rarely-defined concept of “transparency.”
The article identifies the problem as a misunderstanding of the theory and nature of
“transparency.” Based upon the TTP and TTIP lawmaking processes, the article
proposes a broad and modernizing theoretical shift in how we view governmental
transparency by focusing on an overlooked component: timing. Defining transparency as
a function of timing, it conceives “temporal transparency” as a unifying theory upon
which to base analysis of the need for transparency in lawmaking processes.
This article also reorients transparency from a state of being to a condition, built upon
processes rather than institutions. As but one example of application of this theoretical
shift, it proposes a six-factor test for analyzing when, in a lawmaking process, a
negotiating text should be made public and when it should remain secret. By reorienting
transparency away from the amorphous concept of “sharing information” or “the right
to know” and towards the core question of when such information should be disclosed,
the temporal aspects of transparency are illuminated. Beyond TTP and TTIP, this
theoretical shift would help create a better understanding of the need for and desire to
create transparent decision and lawmaking processes generally.
29
Copyright
Abraham Bell (& Gideon Parchomovsky), Copyright Trust
Collaborative production of expressive content accounts for an ever growing number of
copyrighted works. Indeed, in the age of content sharing and peer production,
collaborative efforts may have become the paradigmatic form of authorship.
Surprisingly, though, copyright law continues to view the single author model as the
dominant model of peer production. Copyright law’s approach to authorship is currently
based on a hodgepodge of rigid doctrines that conflate ownership and control. The
result is a binary system under which a contributor to a collaborative work is either
recognized as an author with a full control and management rights or a person who is
deemed a non-author with no rights whatsoever. We argue that the doctrines and judicial
precedents that govern the all-important issue of authorship are out of step with
authorial reality. And the cost to the copyright system is enormous. As we show in this
Article the misalignment between copyright law and authorial reality is both inefficient
and unfair: it harms incentives to create, it denies reward to contributors, it leads to
under-utilization of content and it creates excessive litigation.
To remedy this state of affairs, we propose a new legal construct, which we call
“copyright trust.” In designing this new tool we draw on insights from property and
corporate theory—two areas of research that have long dealt with the challenges of
collaborative enterprises and co-ownerships. The doctrine of copyright trust is
predicated on the insight of decoupling ownership from control. Essentially, it would
empower courts to appoint one contributor as an “owner-trustee” with full managerial
rights and the exclusive power to control the use of the work, while recognizing all other
contributors as “owner-beneficiaries,” who would be entitled to receive a certain
percentage of the proceeds from the work. Copyright trusts would enable courts to retain
the benefits of having a single owner without sacrificing the rightful claims of other
contributors who would be entitled to receive a just reward for their efforts. The
proposed doctrine of copyright trust would supplement, not replace, current doctrine. It
is designed to enrich the menu of options available to courts in deciding authorship
issues. The addition of our solution to the judicial toolbox would not only make it richer,
but would also infuse current law with much needed flexibility that is sorely missing from
other authorship doctrines.
Rebecca Curtin, The Transactional Origins of Author’s Copyright
When discussing the origins of author’s rights in the Anglo-American copyright regime,
commentators often refer to the rise of the Author in Enlightenment thinking or to the
idealized notions of authorship espoused by the Romantics. As a matter of theory, it is no
doubt true that these cultural developments helped to legitimate the idea of an author’s
legal rights in his work. As a matter of practice, however, this paper will argue that the
relevant stakeholders who lobbied for the first statutory recognition of author’s copyright
in the eighteenth century were far more influenced by the transactions authors engaged
in prior to the enactment of the Statute of Anne, transactions that in some cases gave
authors greater rights in their work than the legal default required. Experience in the
30
marketplace helped to assure both authors and booksellers that licensing transactions
could support the creation and distribution of books in a world in which, going forward
at least, authors would hold copyright in their new works. Practice informed theory at
this critical juncture in history and helped to change the legal and social norms
associated with copyright. This project, which is in its early stages, draws on the records
of the Stationer’s Company, parliamentary journals, and unpublished authors’ contracts
from the eighteenth century and before, to uncover the transactional origins of author’s
copyright. In the process, this line of inquiry provides an opportunity to refine our
understanding of the relationship between private ordering and the law.
Ben Depoorter (& Alain van Hiel), The Dynamics of Copyright Enforcement
In an effort to combat online copyright infringements, copyright holders have deployed a
wide range of strategies over the past two decades.
Content industries have targeted individual infringers by way of an extensive settlement
demand campaign, the application of statutory damage awards in noncommercial file-
sharing litigation, and the development of a copyright alert system in cooperation with
Internet service providers. This paper conducts an empirical analysis of the effects of
these copyright enforcement policies. On the basis of a series of survey studies that span
a 15-year period, we measure the effect of various copyright enforcement policies on
download behavior and public attitudes towards copyright infringement over time.
The results reveal a bifurcated landscape of regular file-sharers and non-infringers in
which (1) copyright infringement actions are relatively unaffected by deterrence
considerations; (2) copyright norms remain remarkably stable over time and across
enforcement strategies. Our data provides an opportunity to reflect more broadly on the
effectiveness of various deterrence strategies, including the comparative effects of public
versus private enforcement, the role of enforcement intermediaries, and the tradeoffs
involving the severity and certainty of enforcement.
Elizabeth Townsend Gard (& Geena Yu), Is Fair Use Codable?
We are on a quest: to see if we can code fair use. We have spent the last year working
on this project. We have taken a multifaceted approach. First, looking at literature
about fair use, we looked to see if we could glean patterns that would help better
understand fair use as of 2014. Then, Dr. Townsend Gard's Copyright Class focused on
looking at 50 fair use cases to see if it was "codable". We had Kyle Courney of the
General Counsel's office of Harvard come to chat with us about our results. Now, Dr.
Townsend Gard and a 3L law student from the copyright class, Geena Yu, are embarking
on the experiment of actually trying to code fair use into the Durationator. While
duration is something fairly knowable (dates, for example), fair use is case-based, and
much more fluid. Is there a way to make a tool to understand what courts have done? Is
this informational? Could it ever be predictive? This paper explores our research and
journey. The presentation will also discuss our findings, and hopefully, demonstrate the
paths we have created, coding fair use, whether successful or not.
31
Friday, February 6, 2015, Session 4: 3:40–5:00
Cross-IP
Mark Lemley (& Mark McKenna), Scope
Intellectual property (IP) law doctrines fall into three basic categories: validity,
infringement and defenses. Virtually every significant legal doctrine in IP is either about
whether the plaintiff has a valid IP right that the law will recognize—validity—about
whether what the defendant did violates that right—infringement—or about whether the
defendant is somehow privileged to violate that right—defenses.
IP regimes tend to enforce a more or less strict separation between these three legal
doctrines. They apply different burdens of proof and persuasion to infringement and
validity. In many cases they ask different actors to decide one doctrine but not the other.
The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, for example, decides questions of patent and
trademark validity but not questions of infringement. Even in court, resolution of one
issue is often allocated to a judge while the jury decides a different issue. And even
where none of that is true, the nature of IP law is to categorize an argument in order to
apply the proper rules for that argument.
The result of this separation is that parties treat IP rights “like a nose of wax, which may
be turned and twisted in any direction.” When infringement is at issue, IP owners tout
the breadth of their rights, while accused infringers seek to cabin them within narrow
bounds. When it comes to validity, however, the parties reverse their position, with IP
owners emphasizing the narrowness of their rights in order to avoid having those rights
held invalid and accused infringers arguing the reverse. Because of the separation
between validity, infringement, and defenses, it is often possible for a party to
successfully argue that an IP right means one thing in one context and something very
different in another. And courts won’t necessarily detect the problem because they are
thinking of only the precise legal issue before them.
The result is a number of IP doctrines that simply make no sense to an outsider. In
patent law, for instance, it is accepted law that there is no “practicing the prior art”
defense. In other words, one can be held liable for doing precisely what others had
legally done before, even though a patent isn’t supposed to cover things people have
already done. In design patent law, one can be held liable for making a design that an
“ordinary observer” would find too similar to a patented design, even though the things
that make the two look similar—say, the roundness of the wheels on my car—are not
things the patentee is entitled to own. In copyright, once a court has concluded that
someone has actually copied from the plaintiff, a song can be deemed infringing because
of its similarity to a prior song, even if the similarity is overwhelmingly attributable to
unprotectable standard components of the genre. And in trademark, a party can be
deemed infringing because its products look to similar to the plaintiffs and therefore
make confusion likely, even if that confusion is likely caused by non-source-designating
features of the design.
32
IP has created various stopgap doctrines to try to deal with these holes in IP law.
Copyright law, for instance, says expression cannot be protected if there are too few
alternative means of expression, so that one author’s way of putting something has
“merged” with the idea they are expressing. Trademark law has tried to prevent
overreaching in product configuration protection by making it hard to have a valid
product configuration trade dress at all. But even these efforts to patch the system are
doomed to fail at determining the proper scope of an IP right, for the simple reason that
they are themselves either validity or infringement doctrines and are therefore subject to
the same nose of wax problem as different decisionmakers tackle different pieces of the
issue at different times.
The culprit is simple, but fundamental: IP regimes largely lack an integrated procedure
for deciding the proper extent of an IP right. Without some way of assessing how broad
an IP right is that considers validity, infringement and defenses together, courts will
always be prone to make mistakes on any one of the doctrines. In general, these mistakes
tend to redound to the benefit of IP owners, as courts are more reluctant to declare an IP
right invalid altogether even when the defendant should not be liable for infringement.
But sometimes the mistakes run the other way, as when the fact that the plaintiff is
improperly seeking to expand the scope of her legitimate but narrow right leads a court
to hold that right altogether invalid.
In this article, we suggest that IP regimes need a process for determining the scope of an
IP right. Scope is not exactly validity, and it is not exactly infringement. Rather, it is the
range of things the IP right lawfully protects against competition. IP rights that claim
too broad a scope tend to be invalid, either because they tread on the rights of those who
came before or because they cover things that the law has made a decision not to allow
anyone to own. IP rights with narrower scope are valid, but the narrowness of that scope
should be reflected in the determination of what actions do and do not infringe that right.
And whatever the doctrinal label, we should not allow an IP owner to capture something
that is not within the legitimate scope of her right. Nor should it follow from the fact that
some uses are outside the lawful scope of an IP owner’s right that the IP right itself is
invalid and cannot be asserted against anyone. Only by evaluating scope in a single,
integrated proceeding can courts avoid the nose of wax problem that has grown endemic
in IP law. Scope is, quite simply, the fundamental question that underlies everything else
in IP law, but which courts rarely think about expressly.
One IP regime—patent law—has started in the last two decades to think about scope in a
more systematic way through the process of claim construction. Patent courts hold a
pre-trial Markman hearing to determine what the patent does and does not cover; they
use that determination to inform both validity and infringement. Claim construction has
its share of problems, and patent law has not entirely avoided the nose of wax problem,
but we think patent law is on the right track in trying to resolve these questions in an
integrated fashion rather than allowing inconsistent assessments of scope in separate
validity and infringement proceedings. Other IP regimes can look to a modified form of
the Markman model as they design their own doctrines of scope, learning from its
shortcomings while trying to modulate the breadth of permissible IP rights.
33
In Part I, we discuss the current divided structure of IP regimes, explaining how validity,
infringement, and defenses are often evaluated at different times by different parties
applying different standards. In Part II, we discuss the problematic consequences of that
separation for each of the major IP regimes. Finally, in Part III we propose that IP
adopt a unified scope proceeding, drawing inspiration—but also some caution—from
patent law’s Markman experiment.
Ari Waldman, Trust: The Distinction Between the Private and the Public in IP Law
How to draw the line between public and private is a foundational, first-principles
question of privacy law, but the answer has implications in intellectual property. Both
patent law—through the “public use” bar—and trade secret law—through the problem
of limited disclosures of confidential information—confront the question of whether legal
protection should extend to information previously disclosed to a small group of people.
This project is one in a series of papers on the effects of defining the boundary between
public and non-public information through the lens of social science and, in particular,
interpersonal concepts of trust among individuals. Patent law’s “public use” bar appears
to use a secrecy/assumption of risk paradigm for drawing the line between public and
non-public uses. This strategy has unintended negative effects, including discouraging
experimentation and legitimizing a doctrine that endangers personal privacy in other
contexts. Trade secret law, on the other hand, considers the nature of the relationship
between the owner of information and its recipient as part of an analysis focusing on the
social context of a given disclosure. This standard tracks more closely to the best social
science evidence of how and why individuals and inventors share information and would
encourage experimentation and lead to greater social welfare from new innovations.
Jessica Silbey, IP and Constitutional Equality
Intellectual property reform most often questions the most effective levers for “promoting
progress” and incentivizing creativity and innovation. However, substantial ambiguity
exists as to what “progress” means, particularly in some of the most notable (and
critiqued) court cases interpreting intellectual property statutes (viz Golan, Eldred,
Bowman). What is the content of “progress” towards which IP law reaches? I am
beginning a project exploring this question from two perspectives: (1) qualitative
empirical data from a data set I developed over six years (long-form interviews with IP
professionals and creators and innovators) and (2) Supreme Court IP jurisprudence.
This paper for WIPIP 2015 focuses on the second perspective, rereading recent Supreme
Court cases about IP to exhume underlying themes that might shed light on meaning of
“progress.”
Perhaps surprisingly, by my close reading, the Supreme Court cases express a range of
equality modalities—e.g., Aristotelian equality, anti-subordination equality and
distributive justice (basic capability equality)—as they make sense of IP regulation as
consistent or inconsistent with the constitutional prerogative of “progress.” Looking
closely at a handful of Supreme Court cases—such as Eldred, Grokster, Golan, Kirtsang
and Aereo and several patent cases including Bilski, Myriad, Alice Corps, and
Bowman—reveals arguments structured around one (if not more) of these constitutional
34
modalities of equality. This paper will highlight these equality modalities as overlooked
features of this Supreme Court IP jurisprudence, which appears to envision deeply rooted
equality norms as central to promoting innovation and creativity.
The role of equality norms in cases about IP may be strange or counterintuitive. In
contrast to the utilitarian theory of IP, many of these Supreme Court cases suggests that
equality is a governing principle for the just distribution of IP rights (as well as IP’s
exceptions and limitations). In fact, the Supreme Court’s analyses about the proper
scope and strength of IP statutory provisions explicitly elaborates upon constitutional
modalities of equality as developed in other areas of law, such as in gender and race
discrimination (e.g,. equal pay cases and affirmative action cases). What risks exist in
reading IP through these equality lenses? If critiques of some of these Supreme Court
cases have continuing merit (such as those focused on Eldred, Golan, Aereo or Bowman),
can we better understand what went wrong (and what could go better in the future) by
attending to the equality discourse they contain?
Gregory Mandel (& Kristina Olson & Anne Fast), What People Think, Know, and
Think They Know About IP
The ease of copying enabled by modern technological advance, combined with high
profile debates about online pirating, the affordability of patented medication, and other
policy questions, have brought intellectual property law into mainstream popular
discourse and policy debates. Despite the growing importance of popular understanding
to the success of the intellectual property system, this relationship has barely been
examined. This article reports the most in depth study ever of popular understanding,
preferences for, and reactions to intellectual property law.
The results of the intellectual property studies are dramatic: even though American
adults possess very low knowledge about intellectual property, they clearly believe that
current intellectual property protection is too strong. The majority of the public supports
copying of all manner of copyrightable and patentable subject matter tested in a wide
variety of circumstances prohibited under actual intellectual property law. Contexts
where popular opinion runs contrary to law include when only a portion of a work is
copied, where the copier makes a change to a work, if the copier does not receive
financial compensation, and when the copier simply provides accurate attribution to the
author or inventor. These results raise significant questions concerning the public
legitimacy of intellectual property law and its ability to influence user compliance,
incentivize creative endeavors, and achieve widespread public support.
35
Biotech
Peter Lee, Centralization, Fragmentation and Replication in the Genomic Data
Commons
Researchers around the world generate enormous amounts of genomic sequence data
and related information. Various policies require rapid release of such information into
public databases, thus creating a genomic data commons. Although this repository has
been lauded as accelerating collective productivity, closer examination complicates the
question of whether and to what extent it truly operates as a commons. For instance, in
more recent data release policies, the genomic data commons has transitioned from a
highly open structure toward a governance regime of selective access and exclusivity.
This paper builds on prior scholarship to examine additional governance challenges of
the genomic data commons, illustrating how this repository of information operates both
more and less like a commons than previously thought. Delving into the science of
genome sequencing, assembly, and annotation, it highlights the indeterminate nature of
sequence data and related information, thus giving rise to a need to clean, correct, and
update existing data. Drawing on the Institutional Analysis and Development framework,
this paper examines four approaches for performing these functions: author-centric data
management, third-party biocuration, community-based wikification, and specialized
databases and genome browsers. Notably, these approaches reveal deep tensions
between centralization and fragmentation in the structure of the genomic data commons.
On the one hand, author-centric data management and third-party biocuration represent
highly centralized mechanisms for controlling data. On the other hand, wiki-based
annotation disperses control throughout the community, exploiting the power of the
commons and parallel data analysis to update existing data records. Attempting to
capture the best of both worlds, specialized databases and genome browsers exploit
replication and nonrivalry to preserve original data records while allowing users to
codify vast amounts of value-added knowledge. Among other implications, this study
shows that far from a being a passive repository of information, the genomic data
commons is a teeming, dynamic entity in which communal intervention is critical to
enhancing collective knowledge. Ultimately, the genomic data commons is an intensely
human commons in more ways than one.
Jacob S. Sherkow (& Henry T. Greely), The History of Patenting Genetic Material
This review, to be published in Volume 49 of the Annual Review of Genetics, examines
the history of patenting “genetic material”—the nucleotide sequences and chemical
structures of the ribonucleic acids, DNA and RNA, that make up the “genetic code.” It is
primarily the doctrine of patentable subject matter, or patent eligibility, that governs
which classes of inventions are eligible for patent protection. Although only nominally
controlled by statute, the judiciary has long excluded “products of nature” from patent
protection. Difficulty in demarcating “products of nature” from man-made alterations of
those products led the Court of Appeals, in 1911, to declare that products “isolated and
purified” from their surrounding environments were eligible for patent protection.
36
Beginning in the late 1960s, the “isolated and purified” doctrine allowed the first patents
on genetic material itself, including patents on viral RNA (U.S. Patent No. 3,689,475),
DNA and RNA from cell-free extracts (U.S. Patent No. 4,668,624), and tRNAs (U.S.
Patent No. 4,213,970). As nucleotide sequencing progressed, researchers also began to
patent nucleotide sequences of genes, themselves. (E.g., U.S. Patent No. 4,447,538, for
chorionic somatomammotropin.) The practice of patenting “genes” quickly generated
controversy within the scientific community, coming to a head during the National
Institute of Health’s efforts to sequence the entire human genome in the 1990s.
Nonetheless, even though many genes were patented at the time, virtually no patent
holders engaged in litigation.
After Myriad Genetics became the first entity to sequence—and patent—BRCA1 and
BRCA2, however, the company engaged in a vigorous campaign to enforce its rights
against diagnostic clinicians through patent infringement actions. The resulting lawsuits
ultimately led the Supreme Court, in 2013, to declare that “isolated human genes” were
not patentable subject matter, despite the “isolated and purified” doctrine. The Court
did, however, reserve patent eligibility to cDNA, primers, and probes.
While the decision has been widely viewed as a watershed moment in the history of
patenting genetic material, its practical effect is likely to be minimized by advances in
both genetic technology and the biotechnology industry. Namely, because the genomes of
many species have since been published, obtaining patent protection for known genes
and their analogues has become extraordinarily difficult. Furthermore, because “next
generation sequencing” technologies appear to not infringe traditional “gene patents,”
the sort of disputes giving rise to the Myriad litigation are unlikely to reoccur. The
history of genetic patenting may be close to its end, over a century later.
Saurabh Vishnubhakat (& Arti Rai & Bhavan Sampat), The Rise of Bioinformatics
Examination at the Patent Office
This article describes the creation and its implications of a new USPTO examination art
unit to review bioinformatics patent applications. These applications claim
interdisciplinary inventions from the biological sciences as well as from software and
information sciences, and the USPTO initially assigned them to examiners in a variety of
art units, even outside the agency’s Technology Center 1600 which typically handles
biotechnology and pharmaceuticals. To ensure the uniform examination of these
applications, the USPTO in 1999 created Art Unit 1631 to be staffed with examiners
trained in biology and familiar with computer science. We explore the examination
histories of an early cohort of patent applications assigned to AU 1631, which broadly
embraces inventions that combine biology with computer implementation, inventions that
use algorithms to predict gene function and protein folding, and inventions that apply in
silico screening assays for identifying drug candidates, but which excludes inventions
related to biomedical imaging and stimulation of organ function. We also compare these
examinations with those of a control group of applications assigned to a related art unit
for data processing technologies that are more traditionally software-oriented.
37
Patent—SSOs and Pledges
Kristen Osenga, Everything I Needed to Learn About SSOs I Didn’t Learn in Law
School
There is an overarching myth that technology standards are set in dark rooms by a few
men in cigars, all of whom have wildly entrenched interests in cutting deals to their
benefit. However, the reality is that standard setting organizations (SSOs) do not really
work this way. There are multiple people in the room, some who have IP rights in the
proposed technologies at issues and others that don't. Most of the people in the room are
scientists, engineers, product developers—not lawyers and deal makers. The mission is
generally to find the best technological solution to a scientific puzzle (most often
operability).
The problem with this disconnect between myth and reality is that legal and policy
decisions regarding SSO behavior and treatment of standard essential patents (SEPs) are
largely driven by the myth. To craft better legal doctrines and sound policy in an area as
important as technology standards, it is important to get behind the myth and examine
the reality. This paper explains how judges and commentators think SSOs and SEPs (and
patent pools) work, how these entities and ideas actually work, and why the disconnect is
leading to less-than-optimal legal and policy decisions.
Jurgita Randakeviciute , The Role of Standard Setting Organizations With Regard to
Balancing Rights
Technology standardisation, if properly performed, leads to benefits, both to the
economic system and to the consumers. It is claimed that technology standards reduce
the transaction costs of modularity, foster specialization and division of labour, promote
competition of inventors and producers within standards. However, due to the fact, that
standards are usually protected by standard-essential patents (SEPs), standardization
may impede the access to the standardized technology and create entry barriers into the
market for those, who do not own SEPs.
The afore-described events inevitably cause tension between the owners and the users of
SEPs. In order to keep the balance between the interests of afore-specified parties,
standard setting organizations (SSOs) come into play by requiring SEP owners to license
SEPs on fair, reasonable and non-discriminatory (FRAND) terms. However, such an
attempt to provide competitors with the right to use SEPs while satisfying the financial
interests of the SEPs’ owners quite often lead to extensive and multi-jurisdictional
litigation, which impedes the access to the standardized technology, thus, a re-
consideration of the role of SSOs is needed.
In this paper, it will be claimed, that standardization procedure concerns not only
agreeing upon a standard, but also comprises the actions of making the standard work,
making it available for the industry and its users. That requires a standard to be spread
to all the participants of a specific sector by licencing SEPs. However, taking into
consideration the case-law in SEP-related disputes, it is clear, that many courts lack the
38
necessary economic, technical and industry- specific knowledge to make decisions
effectively, and, thus, the access to SEPs is not maintained. Therefore, SSOs should step
in while solving the SEP-related disputes, which take place after the adoption of the
standard and, this way, improve the access for the users to the standardized technology.
For the purposes of achieving the afore-specified objective, the main tasks of this work
would be the following:
- To discuss the current role of SSOs and their IPR policies in the process of
standardization.
- To analyse the issues occurring in the standard setting procedures, that may lead to
the obstructed access to SEPs (e.g. patent ambush, SEP and FRAND-related disputes,
possibility of the injunctive relief).
- To provide recommendations on the amendments to the functions of SSOs during the
standardization procedures and after the standard is set, in order to improve the
access of SEPs to the potential users.
Jorge Contreras, Patent Pledges
A growing number of firms are making voluntary public commitments to limit the
enforcement and other exploitation of their patents. I term these commitments “patent
pledges”. The best-known category of patent pledge is the so-called FRAND
commitment, in which a patent holder commits to license patents to manufacturers of
standardized products on terms that are “fair, reasonable and non-discriminatory.” But
patent pledges have been appearing in fields and environments well beyond technical
standard-setting, including open source software, green technology and the biosciences.
Pledges include FRAND commitments, as well as commitments not to assert patents
against specified technologies, not to bring infringement actions against certain types of
infringers, and not to transfer patents to non-practicing entities. This article draws upon
the public database of patent pledges compiled by the author and others to provide a
comprehensive descriptive account of patent pledges across the board. It offers, for the
first time, a taxonomy of pledge structures, content and settings, and identifies common
goals and objectives of firms making pledges. It also analyzes legal and practical issues
that will face those who make and receive patent pledges, including enforcement,
detection, permanence, transfer of underlying patents and the advisability of state action
in this area. Finally, the article invites further research and study of this emerging
phenomenon.
Copyright
Brad Greenberg, Black Box Copyright
The apparent simplicity of a copyright infringement claim—was a work copyrighted and
was it used without permission?—belies the complexity introduced by new technological
mediums. Though copyright law is designed to treat unforeseen and extant technologies
similarly, new technologies may introduce a new locus of inquiry, raising questions about
valuing substance over form. Should judges look internally at the technological design or
instead focus externally on the technological output? Numerous cases from the past forty
39
years demonstrate that this internal-external decision is determinative. Yet, courts
continue to diverge on approach and scholarly literature lacks an account of the proper
perspective.
This paper analyzes copyright law’s problem of perspective and offers what I call a black
box perspective. Focusing on the policy goals that animate the 1976 Copyright Act and
the directions in which internal and external perspectives drive innovation, I argue that
copyright law is primarily concerned with technological output, not design— that the law
cares about what a technology does, not how it does it. This perspective has important
implications for existing copyright law, especially as it is applied to new technologies,
and for copyright reform. In particular, I propose that exclusive rights should be
balanced with general limitations, such as a digital first sale doctrine, that also adopt a
black box perspective.
Annemarie Bridy, Aereo: From Working Around Copyright to Thinking Inside the
(Cable) Box
Aereo’s critics faulted the service for attempting to take advantage of a perceived
loophole in copyright law—for, as Dan Burk more neutrally describes it, trying to
“invent around” the edges of the statute and the exclusive rights it confers on copyright
owners. This criticism of Aereo was echoed in the Supreme Court’s decision, which
yoked Aereo to an old technology, cable TV, to bring it within the established scope of the
public performance right. In a bid to make lemonade from lemons, Aereo embraced the
old-tech identity thrust upon it by the Court and invoked the Copyright Act’s statutory
license for cable operators, which would allow it to pay non-market rates for content
licenses. The service, however, now faces the uncomfortable possibility that it is not
different enough from cable to fall outside the scope of the public performance right but
not similar enough to cable to qualify for the statutory license in Section 111. This talk
will explore Aereo’s post hoc efforts to “think inside the box” of Section 111. More
broadly, it will consider what the ultimate fate of those efforts may reveal about how
copyright’s interplay of rights and exceptions, particularly existing statutory licenses,
impacts emerging technologies.
Aaron Perzanowski, Digital Property: The Uncertain Future of Ownership
Over the last decade, digital technology has quietly eroded the foundations of personal
property. Books, photos, movies, music, and video games—once preserved as analog
objects in our living rooms, cars, basements, attics, and backpacks—are now more
commonly stored on digital devices and cloud servers. These socio-technological shifts
have been accompanied by legal ones as well. Just as the combination of expansive
online storage, digital distribution channels, and technological access controls have
removed media from our hands and homes, aggressive intellectual property regimes and
restrictive contractual provisions have sought to undermine, if not eliminate, consumer
personal property interests in the intangible digital goods we acquire. Increasingly,
consumers are regarded not as the owners of their media libraries, but as licensees.
40
Nor are these trends confined to purchases of digital media. Smart phones, self-driving
cars, networked refrigerators, wearable technology like Google Glass, and the
emergence of the Internet of Things promise to fundamentally alter our relationship with
the objects we have traditionally considered our personal property. Like retailers of
digital content, the makers of these devices often insist that consumers are merely
licensed to use these products and frequently prohibit consumers from lending, reselling,
or even repairing them.
As familiar forms of ownership disappear with little public outcry, one might ask,
“What’s the big deal? Aren’t we better off in a world where all the content we want is
accessible in the cloud? Why should we lament the end of personal property?” The
problem is two-fold. First, despite the insistence of digital media retailers and device
makers, personal property ownership serves important societal purposes. It helps
preserve and promote access to important cultural works; it protects our privacy as
consumers from surveillance and intrusion; it encourages competition and conservation
of resources; and it provides balance between the interests of business and consumers.
The current trend away from personal property rights undermines consumer protection
and competition policies without providing new safeguards against abuse.
Second, centuries of practice, reinforced through legal rules, have established a clear set
of consumer expectations regarding their personal property rights. When a consumer
walks into a store and exchanges cash for a book, she knows that she owns it. And she
knows what her ownership entails. She can read her book, lend it to a friend, sell it in a
yard sale, donate it to the local library, or bequeath it in her will. But when the same
consumer acquires an ebook, that clarity disappears. After she clicks the prominent "Buy
Now" button on her preferred digital retail site, she might reasonably expect her
purchase to convey the same sort of property interest she enjoyed in her hardcover book.
However, copyright law, form contracts, and technological constraints all conspire
against her ability to sell, lend, or gift her purchase. Even her rights to possess and read
her ebook are subject to decisions by publishers or retailers to revoke her access, as
Amazon did when it remotely deleted books—including George Orwell's 1984—from
consumers' devices.
Although these shifts affect nearly everyone, until recently they have gone almost entirely
unnoticed outside of a small circle of scholars and consumer rights advocates. But recent
litigation, legislation, administrative hearings, and media reports suggest a growing
awareness of the widening gap between familiar notions of property ownership and the
reality consumers face today. This book will trace the legal, marketplace, and
technological developments that have contributed to this gap, outline its implications,
and chart a reform agenda to restore stable, reliable consumer property rights. We hope
that by highlighting these shifts in the relationship between consumers and the products
they acquire, we can reinforce the nascent public recognition of the importance of
personal property rights.
41
Felix Wu, Secondary Copyright Remedies
The recent call for a Next Great Copyright Act provides an opportunity to rethink aspects
of copyright law that have thus far been constrained by the existing statutory structure.
Others have proposed changes to secondary liability or to copyright remedies, but in
addition to thinking about those areas individually, much could be gained by thinking
about their intersection. Because the law of secondary liability in copyright is primarily
judge-made law, there has been little opportunity to tailor remedies in cases of secondary
liability. Liability is liability and results in the full panoply of statutory remedies being
available. But secondary liability raises issues of technological innovation and freedom
of expression beyond those raised with respect to direct liability. When immunity is the
only tool available to address those concerns, it rightly meets resistance. Limiting
remedies might be a better way to address those concerns, while still recognizing the
importance of adequate copyright enforcement. Some possibilities include limiting or
eliminating statutory damages, replacing damages measures with more restitutionary
ones, and heightening the copyright owner’s burden of proof with respect to remedies.
42
Saturday, February 7, 2015, Session 1: 9:00–10:40
Patent—NPEs
David Schwartz (& Christopher Cotropia & Jay Kesan), Patent Assertion Entity
(PAE) Lawsuits
Is most patent assertion entity (PAE) litigation frivolous? Conventional wisdom holds
that most of the lawsuits brought by PAEs are of low quality and are settled quickly for
substantially below the cost of defense. If almost all of the lawsuits brought by PAEs are
frivolous, then PAE litigation is societally harmful. Empirical support for the
conventional wisdom, however, is very thin.
To rigorously study these questions, we study settlement behavior and litigation outcomes
of lawsuits brought by different types of PAEs. We began with a dataset we previously
compiled that includes the entity status of all patent holders (i.e., individual inventors,
patent holding companies, patent aggregators, universities, failed start-ups, etc.) in
lawsuits filed in 2010. We expanded to the dataset to include the timing and type of
disposition for each defendant in each lawsuit. The completed dataset permits us to
assess whether there are differences in litigation durations and outcomes by entity type.
In this paper, we report detailed information about case duration, settlement, and
resolution on the merits for the various types of patent holders. We find there are
differences among the various entity types. Surprisingly, we find that the true outliers are
not patent holding companies, which are the subject of much academic and public ire.
Instead defendants sued by individual inventors are much more different from other
parties. We set forth how these differences may be relevant to patent policy and potential
reform efforts.
Nicole Shanahan, How Data Liberation Will Nix the Proverbial Patent Troll
This article traces the history and evolution of patent monetization models and explores
each models characteristic strengths and weaknesses. These business models, which are
inherently part monetization and part enforcement, have changed over time, and the law
has been unable to deal with resulting downstream pathologies such as holdup and the
inability of stakeholders to accurately value relevant patent assets. The article explains
that instead of legal approaches to solving the proverbial “patent troll” problem, it is the
big data revolution that has the most potential to have an impact on the marketplace for
patents and in doing so, solve many of the economic asymmetries currently plaguing the
transactional ecosystem. In particular, I explain that improvement of the availability of
patent data, for example the creation of a real-time PAIR API, will lay the groundwork
for systemic innovation and access to low-friction deal making between stakeholders. I
argue that patent trolling as an industry will begin to become a less attractive business
model as patent owners and patent seekers utilize more direct methods of transacting
enabled by big data, such as using web-based licensing tools with low to no transaction
costs.
43
Paul R. Gugliuzza, Patent Trolls, Preemption, and Petitioning Immunity
Patent law is usually thought to be the domain of the federal government, not state
governments. Yet eighteen states have recently passed statutes outlawing false or bad
faith assertions of patent infringement. Those statutes are aimed at fighting so-called
patent trolls, particularly those who send letters to thousands of users of allegedly
infringing technology—as opposed to the manufacturers of that technology—demanding
that each user purchase a license for a few thousand dollars or else face an infringement
suit. Current preemption doctrine, however, largely prohibits the states from regulating
the enforcement of federal patents. Moreover, because the Federal Circuit has grounded
this “preemption” principle in the First Amendment’s Petition Clause, rather than solely
in the Supremacy Clause, the federal government likewise has little power to outlaw
actions related to patent enforcement. Accordingly, this article argues for a reimagined
patent preemption standard, one that is consistent with the long history of courts
enjoining unfair and deceptive schemes of patent enforcement—a history the Federal
Circuit has mostly ignored.
Roger Ford, the Uneasy Case for State Anti-Patent Laws
Several states have enacted laws in recent years that seek to limit the ability of patent-
holders to enforce their patents within the enacting states. There is an easy case to be
made against these laws: the patent system relies on nationwide uniformity to fulfill its
notice and incentive purposes, and if they became widespread and effective tools against
patent holders, state laws could substantially disrupt this uniformity.
There is, nevertheless, an uneasy case that these laws are a good thing, in both theory
and practice. Patent law has a public-choice problem. Patent holders and applicants are
a concentrated interest group, at least compared to the group of possible patent
infringers. We should expect, then, the scope and strength of patent protections to expand
over time; indeed, the widespread complaints about the patent system over the last few
decades suggest this has happened. States offer their own opposing interest groups:
businesses located within each state. States pushing back with anti-patent laws, then, may
represent an effective second-best solution to the problem of patent expansion.
Patent—Rationales
Ofer Tur-Sinai, Patents, Well-Being, and the State’s Role in Directing Innovation
This project concerns the criterion of well-being adopted by the state in the context of
innovation law and policy. The questions of what well-being is and which criterion of
well-being the state should adopt are extensively debated by philosophers and a
discussion of these issues had also recently emerged in legal literature. However,
analysis of patent law by courts and scholars alike is overwhelmingly framed in
economic terms. Consequently, the concept of technological progress that patent law is
set to promote is rather simplistic: It includes primarily those future goods that current
market participants would value the most, or in other words—"new stuff that sells". In
this work-in-progress, I intend to demonstrate the shortcoming of this narrow perspective
44
and explore the possibility of using alternative criteria of well-being in the context of
innovation law. Among other things, I will argue that the mere fact that a future
technology is likely to have a demand in consumer markets does not necessarily imply
that such technology would enhance the well-being of its consumers, and hence, that it is
worthwhile for the state to incentivize its development. This conclusion is reinforced
when considering the alternative investments to which the resources invested in the
development of such technology could otherwise have been allocated. In support of this
argument, I intend to use, among other resources, recent studies conducted by
economists and psychologists, which attest to the lack of positive correlation between
technological prosperity and subjective well-being. For this and other reasons, I will
argue that innovation policy cannot be predicated solely on economic efficiency
considerations and highlight the potential benefits of using a more objective theory of
well-being as the governing framework for the discussion of innovation law. The
adoption of such new perspective may have important normative implications. Among
other things, the use of a more objective criterion of well-being seems to bolster the
arguments in favor of using alternative methods of stimulating innovation, such as prizes
and grants, in lieu of patent law.
Lucas Osborn (and Joshua M. Pearce), A New Patent System for a New Age of
Innovation
This Article first demonstrates how new and emerging technologies are radically altering
the relative costs and benefits of the patent system by significantly reducing the research,
development, and commercialization costs (collectively, “innovation costs”) that are
used to justify the patent system’s existence. These technologies include the obvious—the
internet, the newly established—cloud computing, and the emerging—3D printing and
molecular engineering.
As innovation costs decrease, the neoclassical economic justification for the patent
system comes under stress and begins to interact significantly with social science
research outlining non-monetary incentives for innovation. This article explores what
changes should come to the patent system assuming the average cost of innovation have
fallen significantly (e.g., at least by half and perhaps much more). All things being equal,
if average innovation costs decrease significantly, the relative need for the patent system
will decrease from an economic-incentive viewpoint. As the need to recoup R&D
expenses decreases, the importance of non-monetary incentives becomes proportionally
greater. This article explores these interactions and makes recommendations for how to
change our patent laws¬—albeit gradually—to account for technologies that lower the
costs and risks of innovation.
Srividhya Ragavan, Reorienting Patents as the Protagonist for the Progress of Useful
Arts
Contemporary discussions of patent law posit and couch this regime within property
terms. Such a conception of this area of law ignores the overlay of the law of contracts
over theories of intellectual property law, especially patent law. The characteristic
feature of contract law, over which patent law is heavily based, imposes corresponding
45
obligations or responsibilities over the rights holder. Perhaps, the prevailing notions of
patents as an extension of property rights leads one to construe patents in terms of its
"rights" and is rarely theorized from the obligation perspective. That is, property law
posits rights in correlative terms and thus, defines it from the perspective of the duty of
third parties which concretizes the rights. This article constructs the role and place of
exclusivity from the contractual overlay of patents. It asserts that such a construct gleans
the presence of a corresponding (as opposed to correlative) duty as part of the
government grant that goes beyond the incentivizing and dissemination objectives of the
system. It traces such a duty back to the historic origins of the system and asserts that
recognizing the obligations of the inventor to those who perform the correlative
obligations which entails him the exclusive rights would reposition the system to achieve
its historically preordained position. Such a reformulation is not a new way of
understanding the system. It is merely a reorientation to achieve the objectives for which
the system was established in the first place.
Stephanie Bair, The Psychology of Innovation and Theories of Patent Protection
Empirical psychological studies show that individuals are often internally motivated to
create and will do so without the promise of external reward. Based on this finding, a
number of intellectual property scholars have suggested that patent rights be reformed or
eliminated altogether as superfluous and wasteful.
But this argument does not address the fact that providing incentives to create, though
perhaps the primary economic account for the intellectual property system, is not the
only justification. For the patent system in particular, scholars have proposed several
other utilitarian defenses, including: (1) prospect theory, under which broad patents are
granted early to a single firm to promote efficiency in research and development and
incentivize further innovation within the scope of the patent; (2) disclosure theory, under
which the inventor receives a monopoly in exchange for disclosure of his invention; (3)
commercialization theory, under which a patent is granted to incentivize expensive
commercialization activities; and (4) patent racing theory, under which the availability of
a patent encourages beneficial racing that speeds the pace of innovation. A number of
non-utilitarian justifications have also been proposed, including: (1) fairness, under
which an inventor is rewarded for the fruits of his labor; (2) personality theory, under
which a creator is given a monopoly in recognition of the personality interest he retains
in his invention; and (3) distributive justice, under which monopoly rights are awarded
with the goal of creating a just and superior culture.
Thus, if the patent system is to be modified in light of insights from the psychology
literature, a rigorous application of these insights to each of the justifications for the
system is in order. I undertake this analysis in my Article, and conclude that, for a patent
system that is structured (like ours) as a primarily financial reward, the behavioral
literature is particularly compatible with the commercialization defense of patents. But
the behavioral literature also suggests that non-financial incentives, most notably an
attributional reward, can be an effective means of accomplishing many of the goals
proposed by the various theories of patent protection. I conclude by suggesting some
reforms to our current patent system based on these insights.
46
Cross-IP
Clark D. Asay, Intellectual Property Law Hybridization
Traditionally, patent and copyright laws have been viewed as separate bodies of law with
distinct goals. Patents aim to incentivize the production of inventive ideas, while
copyright focuses on encouraging and protecting the original expression of ideas, but not
the underlying ideas themselves. This divide between patent and copyright laws finds
some support in the Constitution’s IP Clause, and Congress, courts, and commentators
have largely perpetuated it in enacting, interpreting, and analyzing copyright and patent
laws over time.
This Article argues that this traditional divide should be partially breached. It proposes
doing so by adjusting each of copyright and patent law remedies so that each body of law
more explicitly recognizes and facilitates the purposes of the other body of law. The
Article argues that such hybridization efforts are warranted because of the
interdependent nature of much creative and inventive activity. One often spurs the other,
and without explicit recognition of these realities in each of copyright and patent law,
each body of law on its own is less effective than it could be in satisfying their common
constitutional mandate of “promoting the progress of Science and the useful Arts.”
Indeed, much modern research shows that the creative processes that lead to both
copyrightable expression and patentable invention are often so intertwined as to make
neatly dividing and protecting each under separate bodies of law difficult. Furthermore,
some recent scholarship suggests that, based on the historical record, the IP Clause of
the Constitution is best interpreted as assuming the interdependent nature of creative and
inventive activity.
On this basis, this Article argues that adjusting remedies under each of patent and
copyright law would help hybridize intellectual property law in ways that facilitate the
interdependencies of creative and inventive activity. It proposes changes to the fair use
defense under copyright law and injunctive relief standards under patent law in pursuit
of such intellectual property law hybridization. The Article then applies these proposals
to two significant recent legal disputes that implicate both copyrightable expression and
patentable invention. It concludes by suggesting that further research into the
interdependencies between creative and inventive activities, and how the law should
respond to them, is merited. Indeed, I argue that such hybridization efforts are not only
warranted within the intellectual property realm, but within the law more generally.
Patrick Goold, IP Law and the Bundle of Torts
Lawmakers and scholars frequently refer to ‘the tort of copyright infringement’ and ‘the
tort of patent infringement.’ Underlying these statements is a belief that copyright
infringement and patent infringement are two discrete and individual torts. This article
questions this orthodoxy. Using analytic tort theory, this article hopes to demonstrate
that such a view is incorrect. There is no such thing as ‘the tort of copyright
infringement’ or ‘the tort of patent infringement.’ In reality, IP law is composed of
groups of distinct torts that fall under the umbrella terms of copyright infringement and
47
patent infringement. For example, reproducing a protected work and publicly displaying
a protected work are two different copyright-based torts, in precisely the same way as
trespass and private nuisance are two separate real property-based torts. Likewise,
making and selling a patented invention are two different patent-based torts, just as
defamation and false light are two distinct dignitary torts.
The lack of detail in the analytic theory of IP law has produced a serious consequence. In
the common law, it is acknowledged that different torts are associated with different
liability regimes. For example, proving trespass requires neither proof of harm nor fault;
proving nuisance requires proof of harm, but no proof of fault; while proving negligent
property damage requires both harm and fault. By contrast, in IP, the tendency to lump
various different torts in together results in the adoption of uniform liability regimes
across whole ranges of different torts, regardless of whether doing so is necessary for
achieving the law’s underlying normative goals. By paying closer attention to the law’s
structure, this article produces a fine-grained analytic theory of IP. In doing so, it not
only enables a more nuanced appreciation of the choice of liability regimes at our
disposal, but also provides a tort perspective on the traditional “bundle of sticks”
metaphor commonly discussed in this area.
Irina D. Manta (and Robert E. Wagner), IP Infringement as Vandalism
Defenders of strong intellectual property rights often maintain that intellectual property
infringement is theft, and that the sanctions associated with it ought to be high. Others
are skeptical of the property comparison and think that much lower sanctions are
appropriate. We argue that a careful analysis demonstrates: 1) that intellectual property
infringement can be analogized to a property crime, but 2) that the more analogous
crime is vandalism or trespass rather than theft. This categorization takes the rhetorical
punch out of the property comparison.
In addition to analyzing the natures of the various offenses, this Essay investigates the
sanction regimes for different property violations and finds that not only are maximum
statutory sanctions generally higher for intellectual property infringement than for
vandalism and trespass, they are usually also higher than for theft. Bringing intellectual
property infringement in line with property offenses, therefore, would actually
surprisingly result in a lowering of sanctions.
Copyright
Jim Gibson, Copyright Incentives in the Courtroom
To what extent does copyright litigation reflect the economic-incentive justification for
copyright protection? By examining a random sample of more than three hundred
copyright complaints and other docket-level information, this paper explores whether
copyright claimants are using their legal entitlements to sue those who threaten their
works' revenue stream or otherwise undermine the incentive to create works of
authorship.
48
Betsy Rosenblatt, IP, Creativity, and a Sense of Belonging
This project identifies and observes an underexplored force in shaping both the
motivation to create and the motivation to abide by copying and imitation norms: the
desire for a sense of belonging. Several scholars have explored IP’s “negative spaces”:
areas of creation and innovation that thrive in the absence of formal protection. In many
of these areas, copying an imitation are governed by informal “IP without IP” norms,
and scholars have speculated that creators may adhere to these norms for economic
reasons such as network effects and non-economic reasons such as shame and
reputation. Few, however, have explored why participants in these low-IP environments
choose to create in the first place.
This project hypothesizes that in some low-IP communities, the same factor significantly
encourages both creation and adherence to informal copying and imitation norms that
differ from formal law. Specifically, in these areas, participants are motivated to create
by a desire to “belong” to a particular creative community, and are motivated to comply
with norms by that same desire for belonging. It follows logically that these communities
would develop and adhere to copying and imitation norms different from those imposed
by law not only to meet the particular needs of the creative community, but also as a form
of “setting apart”—to distinguish the norms of the community from the more
conventional strictures of formal law and reinforce the meaning of “belonging” to those
creative communities. This refines the common narrative of formal intellectual property
law as a necessary incentive for creation and innovation. Finally, the project explores
the normative implications of this refinement.
Guy Rub, Copyright and Contracts Meet and Conflict
Both copyright law and contract law can regulate certain actions with respect to certain
information goods fixed in a tangible medium of expression. However, because contracts
can regulate what copyright leaves unregulated and free to exploit, there is tension
between the two.
The enforceability of such contracts is typically being discussed under the auspice of
copyright preemption doctrine. Two main approaches emerged in the numerous decisions
on this topic. The first approach suggests that contracts are never preempted. The
competing approach holds that preemption should be found where a contract regulates
an activity that is an exclusive right, such as reproduction or distribution. The Article
suggests that while both approaches are supported by well-established narratives in
copyright law discourse, they are both misguided.
The Article explores several features of copyrighted goods that might, when taken
together, make some contracts undesirable from a copyright law policy perspective. The
Article concludes that standard-form-agreements that make the copying of an idea or a
minor expression illegal, should typically be preempted by the Copyright Act. Most other
contracts, including negotiated contracts over ideas, which are quite common, should
survive preemption.
49
D.R. Jones, Libraries, Contract and Copyright
Section 108 of the Copyright Act provides exceptions for certain library uses of
copyrighted materials. Section 108(f)(4) provides, however, that the provisions of
Section 108 do not affect “any contractual obligations assumed at any time by the library
or archives when it obtained a copy or phonorecord of a work in its collections.” As
copyrighted works have become digital, copyright holders have chosen to adopt a
business model of licensing rather than selling these works. Through contract, copyright
holders have limited or eliminated exceptions for library use of copyrighted works. The
Section 108 Study Group, which reviewed Section 108 for possible changes, examined the
issues with 108(f)(4) but could reach an agreement on a recommendation.
This paper will revisit the issue of whether copyright holders should be able to use
contractual provisions to limit or eliminate exceptions provided for library use under the
Copyright Act. The paper will include consideration of new law in the United Kingdom
which provides that contracts provisions cannot override many of the acts permitted
under copyright law.
Deming Liu, Time to Rethink Copyright for Education
Rawls’s notion of lack of desert would justify or advocate free copyright, or to a lesser
extent, a much relaxed regime than the current copyright regime. However, those who
disagree with Rawls’s theory of justice would oppose free copyright or an alternative
regime. In delving into the root cause of the disagreement, we examine the view of Rawls
on differentiation of talent in developing his theory of justice. We believe that the
fundamental cause for the disagreement arises both from Rawls’s unfounded belief in
talent being innate and unequal and from his treatment of developed talent. Rawls fails to
account for one’s hard work and efforts in developing talent. Rather, he believes without
grounds that whether one makes efforts to develop talent and then obtains and uses talent
is biologically determined. That belief results in fatalism, undermines justice, and to say
the least, would have the debilitating effect. In arguing against Rawls’s treatment of
inborn talent and developed talent, we have sympathy with the disagreement and we
believe that those who work hard in developing their talent and use the developed talent
to produce a good are indeed entitled to the fruit. As far as copyright is concerned, the
creator deserves reward for and is entitled to his creation. Given the contribution of
others to the creation, what is debatable is the nature and extent of the entitlement.
Because it is impossible to allocate a share to each contribution, we propose that
copyright should be made free for education to carry forward one’s indebtedness to the
past as an obligation to future learners who need free copyright to acquire and develop
their talent.
We argue that Nozick, Epstein and others who disagree with Rawls’s notion of lack of
dessert or entitlement would agree with Rawls for one thing, that is, copyright should be
freely available for education, taking into account the role of education, the nature of
creation, and the requirement of intergenerational justice.
50
Saturday, February 7, 2015, Session 2: 11:10–12:30
Patent—NPEs
Scott Kominers (& Lauren Cohen), Patent Troll Evidence from Targeted Firms
We provide theoretical and empirical evidence on the evolution and impact of non-
practicing entities (NPEs) in the intellectual property space. Heterogeneity in innovation,
given a cost of commercialization, results in NPEs that choose to act as “patent trolls"
that chase operating firms' innovations even if those innovations are not clearly
infringing on the NPEs' patents. We support these predictions using a novel, large
dataset of patents targeted by NPEs. We show that NPEs on average target firms that are
flush with cash (or have just had large positive cash shocks). Furthermore, NPEs target
firm profits arising from exogenous cash shocks unrelated to the allegedly infringing
patents. We next show that NPEs target firms irrespective of the closeness of those firms'
patents to the NPEs', and that NPEs typically target firms that are busy with other (non-
IP related) lawsuits or are likely to settle. Lastly, we show that NPE litigation has a
negative real impact on the future innovative activity of targeted firms.
Michael Burstein, Secondary Markets for Patents: An Evaluation
The last several years have seen the development of a nascent secondary market for
patents, in which patents are bought and sold by entities other than the inventors whose
work falls within the patent claims. Transactions in this nascent market have taken a
variety of forms, ranging from “over the counter” sales of patent portfolios in stand
alone transactions or as drivers of M&A activity, to the collateralization of patents as
securities in debt offerings, to exchange mediated through entities that purport to serve
as “market makers.” Most of the commentary on these developments has focused on they
extent to which they have been efficient in matching buyers and sellers of patents, and on
how these new markets could perform better through increased transparency, improved
notice about the content of patent claims, and better pricing methodologies. But
discussions about improving patent markets elide the normative question whether such
markets are desirable at all. In this essay, I offer a framework for answering that
question. I begin with premise that achieving efficiency in the purchase and sale of
patent assets alone cannot be the goal of policy interventions in the patent market. This
is neither the goal of the patent system nor of liquid asset markets. The efficacy of any
market for patents should be measured by the extent to which it promotes or retards the
development and dissemination of new technologies. Patent markets can do this in much
the same ways as capital markets. First, they can allocate working capital—here,
ideas—to its most efficient users. In this regard, patent markets might facilitate
commercialization by allowing inventors, developers, and commercializers to find each
other and strike welfare enhancing arrangements for technological development. But
there is a difference between markets for technology and markets for patents. Where the
fit between the underlying product and the patent is imperfect, strategic behavior may
result. Similarly, patent markets might reduce the risk of infringement liability and
provide a way to “clear” the market of low-value patents that inevitably issue from the
Patent Office. But the welfare benefits of this dynamic could be undermined if liquidity
51
draws into the system patents that would otherwise rationally go unenforced or by
skewing innovative activity toward patentability. I conclude by noting that these effects
are likely to be dynamic and context-specific; the normative case for or against patent
markets will therefore require empirical research.
Shawn Miller (& Ted Sichelman), Does Patent Litigation Diminish R&D?
The overall rate of U.S. patent litigation has been growing rapidly over the past twenty
years, and recent studies estimate that the economic impact of U.S. patent litigation may
now be as large as $80 billion per year. Because patent litigation is costly, one might
expect that it will diminish R & D expenditures, the very activity patents are designed to
spur. Indeed, two recent studies find that (1) public firms sued by non-practicing entities
(NPEs) and that settled or lost their cases experienced on average over a $200 million
decline in R & D expenditures relative to firms that had their cases dismissed; and (2)
that small, publicly traded firms involved in intensive patent litigation experienced a 2.6-
4.7% decline in overall R & D following suit. Here, we supplement, extend, and test these
studies by performing macroeconomic regressions on the U.S. economy as a whole.
Using a time-series, vector autoregression (VAR) model to analyze the impact of patent
infringement filings on R & D over the period 1971-2009, our initial results show that
until the 1990s patent litigation had a positive effect on economy-wide R & D. However,
more recently—roughly over the last twenty years—patent litigation has had a negative
effect on overall R & D—roughly, a 1% increase in litigation has conservatively led to a
0.10% decrease in total R & D expenditures. We obtain these estimates after controlling
for a host of other macroeconomic and patent-related variables that can influence overall
R & D levels. Because patent litigation rates have increased by about 100% over the last
twenty years, this roughly correlates to a 10% drop in total U.S. R & D expenditures (or
$40 billion per year) due to increases in patent litigation. Consistent with earlier studies,
because these trends began in the 1990s, we suggest that these changes may be due to the
rise of licensing-driven suits by practicing entities in the 1990s and even more recently by
NPEs.
Patent—Innovation Policy
Rachel Sachs, Innovation Law and Policy: Preserving the Future of Personalized
Medicine
Personalized medicine is often viewed as the future of health care, rightly receiving
attention from scientists, policymakers, and legal scholars. Yet scholars’ attention too
often focuses on only one area of law. And because patent law, FDA regulation, and
health law work together to affect incentives for innovation, they must be considered
jointly. This Article will examine these systems together in the area of diagnostic
methods, an aspect of personalized medicine which has seen recent developments in all
three systems. This examination reveals that changes in each system might marginally
affect innovation incentives in isolation, but might cause problems considered together.
The Article suggests specific legal interventions that can be leveraged to restore an
appropriate balance in incentives to innovate in diagnostic methods.
52
(1) The Federal Circuit and Supreme Court have recently examined the question of
divided infringement of method patents, where no single entity has performed all steps of
a claim. But neither court has considered the impact of their decisions on method patents
in medicine. Further, neither court has recognized the relationship between their divided
infringement opinions and their patentable subject matter doctrine: both courts have
recently issued decisions requiring claims to include more steps to become patent-
eligible. Where new divided infringement precedent suggests that a single actor must
perform all claim steps, together these doctrines make it harder to both obtain and assign
liability for diagnostic method patents. (2) Simultaneously, the Affordable Care Act
(ACA) has accelerated a restructuring of the diagnostics and hospital industries. The
ACA encourages increased efficiency in medicine, and as provider systems consolidate,
they may jettison portions of their diagnostic services, allowing large diagnostic
companies like Quest or LabCorp to become more monolithic. This divides the steps of
many diagnostic tests, as the physician may order a test then performed by an external
laboratory. These changes in institutional organization may compound the difficulties
diagnostic method patent holders face in assigning infringement liability. (3) Finally, the
FDA has recently proposed to begin regulating laboratory-developed tests. This new
regulatory regime will likely increase the cost of developing new diagnostics, as
development will be accompanied by a new, potentially significant, regulatory burden.
Particularly since reimbursement for diagnostics has historically been low, not all labs
will voluntarily invest in developing such tests, especially if clinical trials are required.
As a result, incentives for investment in innovative diagnostics might decrease.
Legal actors have recently pulled levers in all three systems, likely going too far in
disincentivizing innovation. Fortunately, each system can also be used to solve the
problem. For instance, in patent law, the Supreme Court’s recent divided infringement
opinion was likely wrong, and perhaps either the Federal Circuit should circumvent it on
remand or Congress should reverse it. In FDA regulation, Congress might create a short
exclusivity period for newly approved diagnostics. On balance, an exclusivity period is
likely the best solution. Companies would still face difficulties in obtaining patents, but
those developing diagnostics could more easily recoup their investment.
Ted Sichelman (& Jonathan Barnett), Revisiting Labor Mobility in Innovation
Markets
It is widely asserted that laws that facilitate labor mobility among R&D personnel are
conducive to innovation. The primary example for this thesis is Silicon Valley. According
to the standard argument, California’s refusal to enforce non-compete agreements has
promoted employee turnover among technology competitors, which in turn has
redounded to the industry’s collective benefit by fostering the widespread dissemination
of new ideas and technologies. By contrast, Massachusetts’ insistence on enforcing non-
compete agreements purportedly stinted development by discouraging the spread of ideas
within the inventive community. In this paper, we set forth theoretical and empirical
arguments that cast doubt on this thesis and offer a novel theory of when and how non-
compete agreements promote and hinder innovation.
53
Xuan-Thao Nguyen, Financing Innovation: Legal Development of IP as Collateral in
Financing
Commentators have repeatedly raised questions about the United States’ ability to
continue to be an innovative nation. Some complained that compared to other countries
with higher rates on innovation, the United States has been falling behind due to lack of
funding for research. Small businesses, known for being incubators of new ideas and job
creation, continue to face major obstacles in obtaining funding from government and
financing from lenders. While lenders are willing to make credits available for large
businesses, they ignore small businesses. The dire financing situation faced by small
businesses today is not much different from the credit squeeze during and after the epic
financial crisis in 2009. Without funding from both public and private sectors, small
businesses cannot operate their companies, innovate for new ideas, and foster
employment growth. The United States will soon lose its edge in innovation. How can
financing be made available for small businesses that most often own neither real
property nor tangible assets?
Small businesses have ideas, trademarks, content, know-hows, and other intangible
assets. These intangible properties can be used as collateral for small businesses to
obtain financing from the private sector. Obviously, lenders must be willing to accept
this type of property as collateral in order for credits to be extended to small businesses.
Creditors must overcome their reluctance in these commercial transactions. This Article
argues lenders should take great comfort in making loans to small businesses with
intellectual property assets serving as collateral. The United States has a long legal
history of paving the path for financing innovation, as seen through the development of
decisional law spanning from 1845 to the present. The established history of lending
with intellectual property collateral is uniquely American. Recourses and remedies
under strong rules of law system are readily available for secured lenders and creditors
who are willing to finance innovation.
The Article will proceed as follows. Section I will trace the development of embracing
patents, copyrights and trademarks in chattel mortgages. This Section will analyze early
cases, including the seminal case, Waterman v. Mackenzie in patent mortgages, and their
significance in recognizing the incorporeal property and the right of the mortgagee. In
addition, Section I will focus on the development in copyright statutes in relation to the
use of copyrights in mortgages. Most importantly, the arrival of new technologies
necessitates the increase of financing for the creation and distribution of copyrighted
content and new legal development in the area of foreclosure of copyright mortgages.
Section I will also examine whether trademarks were used in chattel mortgages during
the similar period of patent and copyright mortgages. Due to the nature of trademarks
and stricter view of trademarks and their attached goodwill, trademark mortgages faced
certain limitations. Recognizing the limitations in trademark mortgages, this Section
compares statutorily how patent, copyright and trademark provisions differ in their
recording requirements for mortgages.
54
Section II will move to the post-war period of robust economic growth and commercial
law reform nationwide. The adoption of Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code
marks a new modern era of creating uniform law for states to encourage financing based
on personal property as the backbone of economic growth. Paralleling the development
in uniform commercial law, historic milestones in intellectual property law are seen
through the overhauls in trademark law, patent law, and copyright law that brought
intellectual property law to modern time. Section II will trace the intersection of Article
9 of the Uniform Commercial Code and intellectual property law. This intersection
would lead to new approaches to patent collateral, copyright collateral, and trademark
collateral. Particularly, the old mortgages were replaced with new understanding and
practices of security interest in modern secured transactions. In addition, challenging
issues relating to whether federal or state law will govern perfection of intellectual
property must be resolved in order for financing based on intellectual property to be
flourished.
Section III will look beyond financing based on intellectual property in the private sector.
This Section will examine U.S. government’s role in financing small businesses with
intellectual property assets. The U.S. Small Business Administration has a history of
extending loans to small businesses and accepting intellectual property as security for the
repayment of loans. This Section will analyze decisional law for a comprehensive
understanding of both the practice and legal development of government’s financing for
innovation from small businesses.
Section IV will shift to contemporary issues arise in financing innovation today.
Specifically, this Section will dissect the recourse and remedies available to secured
creditors in financing innovation when the borrower could not fulfil payment obligations.
This Section will analyze recent Federal Circuit’s decision on whether secured party of
intellectual property collateral becomes owner of the intellectual property by operation
of law in post default. Clearly, predictability as to ownership of intellectual property
collateral in post default will enhance financing of innovation.
There are some risks associated with financing innovation. Section V will identify and
assess the risks. Notably, whether a grant of security interest in some circumstances be
deemed as fraudulent transfer and whether the secured creditor is liable for infringement
are the risks that have emerged in financing innovation. The risks, however, are rare in
financing innovation by the private sector.
Learning from the development of financing innovation from 1845 to the present, Section
VI will offer some observations and discuss implications for future financing of
innovation. There is a need for both traditional and online lenders to appreciate the
intellectual property assets held by small businesses. The intellectual property assets
should be included in the analytics in assessing the overall health of a business seeking a
loan or a line of credit for its new innovative product, idea or vision. The Article ends
with a brief conclusion that in order to maintain the United States’ innovative edge,
attention to access to financing by small businesses must be at the center of the
discussion and intellectual property must be recognized as part of the center.
55
Sarah Burstein, The High Cost of Cheap Design Rights
The U.S. design patent system has been repeatedly criticized for being “too expensive.”
Critics argue that the United States should adopt a system in which design rights are
cheap or free to obtain, like the European Community Design regime. Even the U.S.
Patent & Trademark Office appears to assume that design patents should be as cheap as
possible, cheering the United State’s progress towards joining the Hague System for the
International Registration of Industrial Designs. This paper questions the commonly-
accepted proposition that design rights should be as inexpensive as possible; these
“cheap” rights impose significant costs on competitors, judicial systems, and society as a
whole. Many of these costs spring from the fact that someone must pay to search the
prior art and determine if a claimed design right is valid. In the United States design
patent regime, the requirement of PTO examination effectively forces the claimant to
bear those search costs as a prerequisite to protection. In “cheap” systems, like Europe,
those costs are externalized to competitors and, ultimately, to society. Viewed in this
manner, forcing claimants—who, after all, are the ones seeking to change the free-
copying status quo—to bear the requisite search costs is neither unfair nor inefficient. At
a minimum, these external costs should be recognized and discussed in evaluating the
merits of particular design-protection regimes.
Trademark
Glynn Lunney, Inefficient Trademark Law
Since at least 1973, law and economics scholars have argued that the common law
development of legal doctrine in courts is more likely to lead to efficient rules than the
interest-group driven politics of the legislature. In trademark law, the exact opposite has
occurred. The legislature gave us a reasonably efficient statute in the Trademark Act of
1946, but then courts re-interpreted it into an inefficient and sometimes incoherent
morass. This article explores why. I argue that a collective action problem has caused
this inefficient evolution. Trademark owners, as plaintiffs, largely capture and thus
internalize the benefits of broader trademark protection. Trademark owners are
therefore willing to pay for litigation that has a chance to change legal doctrine in ways
that will lead to broader trademark protection. In contrast, trademark defendants do not
usually capture the full benefits of narrowing trademark protection. Rather than benefit
trademark defendants, either individually or collectively, narrowing trademark
protection primarily benefits consumers by creating more competitive markets. While
more competitive markets are generally desirable, their benefits are largely external to
any given trademark defendant. For that reason, trademark defendants systematically
lack sufficient incentive to challenge, through litigation, questionable and overbroad
trademark doctrine. The net result has been a common law evolutionary process biased,
at least as a general matter, towards ever broader trademark protection.
56
Peter J. Karol, An Exclusive Right to Judicial Discretion: Learning from eBay’s
Muddled Extension to Trademark Law
This early-stage article will address the current debate over whether to extend, to
trademark law, the rule in eBay v. MercExchange denying prevailing patent plaintiffs
presumptive entitlement to injunctive relief. It focuses, however, not on whether eBay
should apply to trademark law, but rather on how the debate exposes an inherent
incongruity undermining foundational provisions of the Lanham Act. Namely, the Act
purports to grant ex ante exclusive rights to mark owners against all confusingly similar
uses, but then reserves discretion to district courts to deny statutory injunctive relief even
where plaintiff has demonstrated likely harm to its exclusive rights. This discrepancy is
further compounded by the difficulty of attaining monetary relief in non-willful cases of
trademark infringement under the Act. In short, as currently interpreted, the statute
creates a right without any presumptive remedy. The article will start by first analyzing
the debate over eBay’s place in trademark law, revealing the trouble this issue has posed
for federal courts and commentators alike. The decisions reveal deep conflicts at the
appellate level, and widespread confusion among the district courts. Commentators,
though more consistent in their general rejection of eBay as sensible precedent for
traditional trademark infringement claims, mostly fail to address the statutory arguments
advanced by the courts (i.e., that the Patent Act and the Lanham Act use nearly identical
language to give injunctive discretion to federal courts). For its part, the otherwise
robust property-versus-liability rules literature tends to avoid direct confrontation with
the curious case of trademarks. Next, the article will seek to locate the source of this
difficulty and conflict. It cannot be explained away, as with eBay in the patent space, as
a difference of opinion on when infringement also causes harm. That is because proof of
harm is an element of a claim for trademark infringement (in the form of a demonstration
of likely confusion) but not for patent infringement. Rather, it appears rooted more in a
duality in the Lanham Act itself. Namely, the Act purports to create a strong form of
exclusive right in registered marks. Yet it then gives apparently complete discretion to
courts to deny injunctive relief even where plaintiff has demonstrated infringement of this
exclusive right and shown likely continuing harm (to itself and the public). Under
modern interpretations, moreover, the Act denies monetary relief in most non-willful
trademark infringement cases. We are thus left with a structure that, by design, seems to
create an exclusive right lacking a clear remedy. The article will then turn to the
drafting history of the Lanham Act in an attempt to understand the rationale for such
seemingly dissonant notions. It will argue that neither Congress nor the drafters of the
Act provided any coherent basis for granting a strong form of national, exclusive rights
to trademark owners while denying any presumptive right to relief. Instead, this
incongruity was most likely a product of the Act’s long, haphazard drafting history,
coupled with unresolved conflicts regarding the basic theory of the legislation.
Specifically, rather than provide a logical and consistent explanation for how a regime of
national trademark registration can coexist with geographically limited, state-created
common law trademark rights, the Act buried the controversy (and placated opposition)
by retaining complete ex post judicial discretion to enforce the supposedly ex ante
“exclusive” right. Under this view, contemporary confusion over eBay signals a
reemergence of this long-dormant, but essential, conflict over the basic purpose and
structure of the federal trademark registration scheme.
57
Xiyin Tang, The Case for Genericide Defenses in Artistic Works
(http://ssrn.com/abstract=2551268)
In recent years, even those outside the legal community have come to know the two-word
phrase "fair use." It's become a nouvelle vogue topic of sorts, the darling child of
transformativeness and critical commentary meant to save the draconian and
nonetheless-still-expanding intellectual property laws from overreach. Yet fair use is
riddled with problems, as we all know: it's a defense, not an affirmative right; there are
no bright-line rules; it's case-by-case; it's notoriously unpredictable. Yet everything from
rap songs to chewy dog toys have been saved by fair use. In recent years, what I like to
call the "postmodern problem" has highlighted yet another glaring inadequacy of the fair
use doctrine: its focus on parodies, in which the copyrighted work itself is targeted, to the
detriment of everything else (pastiche, appropriation, collage). And yet the postmodern
condition suggests that it is precisely the inability of a work to be unique enough TO
parody that makes those other forms of appropriation so urgent today.
Yet there is a lesser-mentioned safeguard against intellectual property overreach that
taps precisely into those ideas of the banal and the universal. It is genericide, and it is the
bastard child of all defenses, relegated to the backseat of trademark law in a world in
which fair use reigns. But genericide does everything fair use does not do: it expropriates
a trademark into the public domain, thus diminishing the costs of infringement litigation;
it recognizes the right of the public, NOT the trademark owner, to decide a mark's fate. It
is audience-friendly and First Amendment-approved. So why don't we talk about it
enough? This Article makes a plea for increasing the use of genericide or genericness
defenses in expressive use cases. It argues that rather than focusing on arguments of
transformativeness in the hopes of winning a fair use defense, artists should emphasize
that they did NOT use the work as a means of targeting the work itself–that is–anti-
transformativeness. The more we do so, the more "fair" other types of art (of which there
are many) begin to seem.
Copyright
Amanda Reid, Notice of Continuing Interest in a Copyrighted Work
The orphan works problem chills. It chills business and commerce by impeding the
ability to use and license works. And it also chills speech. Yet other IP doctrines do not
face these problems. The patent system has maintenance fees and the federal trademark
schema requires a declaration of use and continuing interest. Requiring an analogous
filing of continuing interest in a copyrighted work would help ameliorate the orphan
works problem and the resulting chilling effect and deadweight loss. Many works were
not renewed when copyright renewals were required. And the economic viability of most
works does not last as long as current copyright protection. Thus there is a doctrinal
justification to harmonize copyright with the other IP doctrines and to require a public
notice and claiming of an interest in the work. And there is an economic justification for
weeding out the copyright thicket.
58
Chris Hubbles, No Country for Old Audio
In the United States, audio recording copyright has inadvertently become extreme in
duration and scope. Due to quirks in copyright law development, there are essentially no
sound recordings in the public domain; their copyright term is longer than that of any
other intellectual object. Yet many audio carriers are particularly fragile and subject to
physical deterioration, and are at risk of degrading sooner than the expiration of their
copyright term. Most theoretical defenses of copyright assume that creative works subsist
indefinitely as ideal objects, without any upkeep. In fact, all intellectual works are subject
to physical degradation, and philosophies of intellectual property which do not take this
into account may lend support to policies that pose existential threats to the works they
are nominally intended to protect. This presentation takes audio recordings as a case
study demonstrating that maintenance and preservation concerns ought to be important
limiters to intellectual property rights claims.
Zvi Rosen, Paradoxes and Lessons of State Law Protection for Sound Recordings
The complex situation regarding legal protections for sound recordings made before
1972 has been in the news, both regarding recent litigation and regarding the push to
federalize all sound recording copyrights. Following on surveys done by myself and
others regarding the current state of protection for sound recordings, this piece will
explore how protection for sound recordings under state law is not a rough equivalent of
federal copyright law, but is rather both broader and narrower in the scope of protection
and remedies it offers. This piece will offer a reappraisal of the importance of statutory
damages to rightholders and also offer solutions to the current controversy regarding
whether a public performance right for sound recordings exists under state law.
59
Saturday, February 7, 2015, Session 3: 1:00–2:20
Patent Institutions / Policymaking
Camilla Hrdy, Patent Nationally, Innovate Locally
This article makes a novel argument regarding the institutional structure of U.S. patent
law from the perspective of optimal government size. It argues the Internalization
Principle—which states that the jurisdiction that internalizes the external costs and
benefits of an activity should be responsible for its promotion or regulation (Oates 1972,
Cooter 2000)—applies to U.S. patent law. The patent system is bifurcated in the way it
promotes innovation. Inventions—the technical information that can be codified in patent
documents and costlessly transmitted to others (Arrow 1962)—produce national and
global externalities. Only a government with a broad jurisdiction and a long time horizon
has the ability and incentive to effectively protect this information in interstate markets
and coordinate public disclosures. This is the role of the federal government pursuant to
the IP Clause, which gives Congress power “to promote the Progress of Science and
useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to
their respective Writings and Discoveries.”
However, innovations—the functional versions of inventions that are ultimately put into
practice and sold in markets (Schumpeter 1911)—produce many local externalities. The
local benefits of innovation include immediate benefits like tax revenues and hiring of
local workers, and longer-lasting benefits that result when innovators locate in proximity
to one another, called agglomeration benefits. These include access to specialized
suppliers, larger pools of skilled labor, and face-to-face information exchange.
(Krugman 1991). Indeed, much of the information required to practice inventions can
only be exchanged in proximity. (Polyani 1966, Von Hippel 1994, Lee 2012). Thus,
proximity is theorized to enhance the ability of innovators to exchange ideas and increase
the pace of innovation. (Feldman 1994). Meanwhile, costs of agglomeration include
crowding, pollution, and safety concerns, especially when new or recently developed
technology is involved. I argue that promoting or constraining these localized
externalities is the role of smaller-than-federal units of government: states, regions, and
metropolitan areas (SRMA), depending on which government size internalizes the
externalities. SRMA are likely to be more responsive to local conditions and to the needs
and preferences of their constituencies, especially when they are disciplined by
competition for mobile residents. (Tiebout 1956.) One of the most important implications
of this is that SRMA do not have a bias against “commercial science” and are eager to
partner with industry. In addition, SRMA can serve as “laboratories” in which to
experiment with diverse innovation policies and from which other SRMA can learn.
(Ouellette 2014.)
In this article I demonstrate this bifurcation at a descriptive level. The federal
government provides significant incentives to promote the generation and disclosure of
new technical information. These include patents and funding for basic research. But
outside national mission areas such as defense, the federal government provides few
incentives to practice and commercialize inventions. In contrast, SRMA are far more
60
engaged in fostering practice and commercialization in order to capture the benefits for
local residents. They do so through location incentives and financial awards for private
firms (Hrdy forthcoming 2015), and by engaging with universities, which are seen as the
anchor for growing a lasting innovation economy within a region. (Porter 1998.) On the
flip side, SRMA are also engaged in regulating unfamiliar innovative activity that
potentially produces external harms to local residents, such as fracking, automated cars,
or drones. (Kaminski 2013.) This follows the Internalization Principle: the government
that internalizes the externalities has the best incentives and ability to act.
The article recognizes the limits of decentralized governance due to the presence of
inevitable externalities, disuniformity, lack of coordination, and perverse incentives
resulting from competition for scarce resources. (Enrich 1996.) It fully supports a strong
federal role in cases of “collective action failure.” (Cooter & Siegel 2010.) However,
shifting to the normative, the article agues that the bifurcation of patent law represents
an efficient allocation of institutional resources to very different functions. The federal
government’s role should be to increase the potential size of the reward from invention,
promote disclosure of technical information, and facilitate diffusion of innovation among
jurisdictions. Meanwhile, the role of SRMA should be to facilitate commercialization of
inventions in a particular location with attention to the needs of the region. The article
also points out some areas where the bifurcation is not followed. These include U.S.
patents that seek to do more than promote the generation, disclosure, and transfer of
technical information, (Kitch 1977), and some university-industry technology transfer
practices. For example, when universities adopt commercialization strategies such as
patent licensing without involvement from local governments in which the university is
located, such activities may not be sufficiently directed at generating innovative activity
in the region.
Cynthia Ho, Drug Rehab: How Cognitive Biases can Improve Drug Development
This proposed article aims to examine how cognitive biases of the FDA and Congress
impact drug development, as well as suggest how a better understanding of these biases
may improve solutions to drug development. In particular, this article is evaluating non-
patent methods of promoting innovation, including but not limited to other areas of
exclusivity, such as data exclusivity, pediatric exclusivity, and orphan drug act
exclusivity. In recent years, Congress has enacted more exclusivities for drug companies
through regulatory, rather than patent laws. This article evaluates whether there at
cognitive biases at work that result in these laws, as well as whether those biases could
be better understood to promote better solutions for drug innovation.
This is an important issue since not only is the number of new drugs modest compared to
expenditures, but also because these regulatory exclusivities may be unduly embraced
simply because patents have been increasingly subject to criticism. This article thus aims
to provide further insight and understanding to better promote innovation in a more
tailored manner than the “one size fits all” patent standard that is well acknowledged to
result to mostly promoting the most commercially successful, but not necessarily the most
socially necessary drugs.
61
Megan La Belle, Public Enforcement of Patent Law
Law enforcement in the modern regulatory state is largely a joint enterprise. In areas
such as securities, antitrust, civil rights, and environmental law, enforcement
responsibilities are allocated between public and private actors. Patent law, on the other
hand, is enforced almost exclusively through private lawsuits. Considering patent law’s
constitutionally-mandated public purpose—“to promote the Progress of Science and
useful Arts”—this privatization of patent enforcement is troubling.
In recent years, there has been some movement away from this purely private
enforcement regime for patent law. The Department of Justice and Federal Trade
Commission, for example, have involved themselves in certain patent matters that
implicate antitrust law. While heading in the right direction, these regulators alone
cannot adequately enforce patent law due to their limited jurisdiction, resources, and
expertise.
This Article thus proposes a more robust public enforcement mechanism for patent law.
It argues that Congress should arm the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (PTO), the
agency responsible for reviewing patents ex ante, with broad powers to police patent
validity ex post. The PTO is best situated to lead this effort because of the agency’s
expertise, institutional resources, and enhanced powers under the America Invents Act.
Moreover, charging the PTO with the responsibility for policing patents should serve to
dispel allegations of agency capture and institutional bias toward patent owners.
Josh Sarnoff (& Alan Marco), Is Refiling Practice Doing What It Ought To? I Can
Name That Invention in X Words
Numerous critiques have been leveled against “refiling” practice – i.e., the ability of
applicants to continue to prosecute the same or related claims in the same or new
applications after an initial final rejection of claims in a predecessor application. These
critiques suggest that refilling applicants use the legally permitted multiple opportunities
to wear down patent examiners so as to obtain the grant of claims that should never have
issued. New data analyses of independent claims from patent publications and patent
grants suggest that the story is much more complex. Refilling practice permits applicants
to obtain claims of increasingly narrow scope when reexamined, either through requests
for continued examination (RCEs) or for each round of continuing applications filed.
RCEs tend to reduce scope more, while continuing applications tend to reduce the
number of independent claims granted more (while still reducing their scope). Thus, the
data suggest that refilling practice is doing what it should – permitting applicants to
continue to pay for examination of applications on sufficiently valuable inventions, so as
to obtain patents claims of appropriate scope.
62
Biotech
Kevin Collins, Justifying Patent Ineligibility: Regulation-Resistant Technologies
Over the last five years, the Supreme Court has issued an unprecedented four opinions
restricting the reach of patent-eligible subject matter. Patent scholars have been highly
critical of these opinions on utilitarian grounds. These critics assume that patent law
already has a robust set of non-eligibility doctrines—novelty, nonobviousness,
enablement, utility and the like—that regulate what constitutes a permissible patent and
that are capable of identifying and invalidating most, if not all, costly patents on a fine-
grained basis. Taking the efficacy of these non-eligibility doctrines as a baseline, they
argue that the marginal impact of the Supreme Court’s patent-eligibility rules will be the
invalidation of patents that are, on balance, socially beneficial.
This Article advances the ongoing debate over the utilitarian justification of the Supreme
Court’s patent-eligibility opinions by articulating a novel justification for restrictions on
patent eligibility. The intrinsic nature of some technologies is different in a way that
renders them resistant to regulation by the non-eligibility doctrines. Regulation
resistance turns the common criticism of restrictions on patent eligibility on its head.
When patents claim regulation-resistant technologies, the non-eligibility doctrines cannot
do the cost-reducing work that we expect them to do, and restrictions on patent eligibility
offer a viable tool for doing the needed cost-reducing work.
In addition to introducing regulation resistance as a justification for restrictions on
patent eligibility, this Article also offers proof of concept. It employs the theory of
regulation resistance to interpret two of the Supreme Court’s recent opinions that restrict
patent eligibility and justify them on utilitarian grounds. In Alice v. CLS Bank, the Court
restricted the patent eligibility of computer software, and, in Mayo v. Prometheus, the
Court held diagnostic inferences to be patent ineligible. Software is an unusual
technology because it can only be claimed using functional language, and diagnostic
inferences are unusual because they traffic in concepts rather than categories. These
unusual qualities render both software and diagnostic-inference patents resistant to
regulation by some the non-eligibility doctrines and justify restrictions on their patent
eligibility.
Yaniv Heled, Five Years to the Biologics Price Competition and Innovation Act
In March 2010, President Obama signed into law the Patient Protection and Affordable
Care Act (PPACA). In addition to “Obamacare,” however, PPACA also included
numerous other statutory amendments, one of which being the Biologics Price
Competition and Innovation Act (BPCIA). Representing the culmination of a long and
fervent legislative struggle, BPCIA set up a framework for the approval of follow-on
versions of biological pharmaceuticals (a.k.a. biologics), including periods of market,
data, and generic exclusivities in such products, as well as an elaborate scheme for the
resolution of related patent disputes. And yet, despite the fact that BPCIA was passed in
early 2010, it was only in July 2014 that the FDA accepted the first application for the
approval of a follow-on biological product; it was also around that same time that the
63
first litigation involving a patent dispute arising under BPCIA was filed. This article will
examine the reasons for this apparent delay in the implementation of BPCIA and,
comparing the track record of BPCIA’s implementation to that of the Hatch-Waxman
Act, try to assess whether earlier predictions regarding the expected failure of the BPCIA
framework were justified.
Nicholson Price (& Arti Rai), Biosimilars and Manufacturing Trade Secrets
The rapidly increasing role of biologics in the national health care budget created the
political pressure necessary to implement a "generic" pathway. The extent to which this
pathway will actually succeed in reducing costs is unclear, however. Processes for
making biologics are notoriously complex, andan enormous literature testifies to the
costs that firms aiming to make biosimilars will face. What this literature generally
ignores is the reality that the information to make biosimilars (or perhaps even the holy
grail of "interchangeables") does of course exist -with the firms that have made the
pioneer biologics. To some extent, because of regulatory filings, the FDA also has this
information. The obvious challenge is how to make at least some of this information
publicly accessible without damaging innovation incentives. Perhaps enablement
requirements for biologics patents should be applied more strictly. Indeed, using existing
but underutilized statutory authority, the PTO could ask FDA experts to assist in making
enablement determinations. Because pioneer biologics firms have 12 years of regulatory
exclusivity, however, such a move may cause pioneer firms to avoid patents altogether
and rely even more heavily on trade secrecy. Alternatively, regulators could use the
carrot rather than the stick, offering additional rewards to those who disclose trade
secret information. Information release through carrots and sticks could feed into
nascent public efforts to create a general purpose knowledge base for biologics
manufacture. From a broader theoretical standpoint, the role of trade secrecy in
biologics manufacturing illuminates not only how firms make choice between patents and
trade secrecy but also debates regarding the disclosure function of patents and the
complex intersection between patents, trade secrecy, and the regulatory state.
Liza Vertinsky, The State as Pharmaceutical Entrepreneur
An increasing divergence between private sector efforts and public health needs has
prompted a growth in public-private partnership strategies to improve pharmaceutical
innovation outcomes. Government actors such as the NIH and the FDA are relying
heavily on public-private partnerships, contractual arrangements that involve a sharing
of risk, cost and control, to accelerate the pursuit of cures for complex diseases in areas
where private sector efforts have proven to be inadequate. This paper examines this
changing role of the government in processes of pharmaceutical innovation, with
government actors acting increasingly as entrepreneurial partners in the development of
drugs for disease areas with potentially lucrative commercial markets and large public
health burdens. I consider whether and how the legal framework governing traditional
modes of government funding and involvement in drug discovery and development should
be adjusted to reflect this expanded government role.
64
To anchor my analysis I focus on public-private partnership strategies to accelerate the
pursuit of a cure for Alzheimer’s disease and other major market complex diseases. I
examine the ways in which the existing legal framework, particularly rules impacting
federally funded inventions, technology transfer, and the ownership and disclosure of
information and inventions, impacts these partnership strategies. I suggest that the
existing legal framework is based on an outdated model of technology transfer and
commercialization that ignores and sometimes inhibits the role of government as
indispensable co-entrepreneur. It does not reflect the reduced need to rely on purely
private market incentive schemes and the greater need for laws that foster greater
sharing of both knowledge and rewards. It does not provide for adequate benefit sharing
between public and private parties, particularly where the public sector is bearing a
large part of the risk and cost involved in the project. I suggest that the existing legal
framework runs the risk of stifling the government’s role as innovator by trying to funnel
government initiatives into traditional pathways of technology transfer. I identify areas
where change in the legal framework is needed to reflect the broader government role in
drug discovery and development activities. I then undertake a comparative analysis of
alternative interventions, such as adjustments in the rules and requirements attaching to
federally funded research and development activities, a recalibration of intellectual
property rights in contexts of public-private partnership, and profit sharing
arrangements for drugs that are produced with the help of the government.
Trademark
Leah Chan Grinvald, Contracting Trademark Fame
Fame is the gold standard in trademark law, which enables a trademark holder to
control almost anything that third parties and the public do with their trademark. In
addition, having a “famous” mark could allow some trademark holders make an end-run
around the international trademark registration system. However, fame is extremely
hard to prove and requires evidence that large numbers of the consuming public
recognize the trademark. Some large trademark holders, such as Facebook, are turning
to website terms of use to potentially bolster claims of consumer recognition. For
example, Facebook’s terms of use has a clause whereby end users recognize Facebook’s
rights to “face” and “book” as trademarks. This argument is plausible because in
contract law, these website terms of use are generally considered valid contracts based
on a theory of constructive consent. Given the large number of users of some of these
websites (Facebook has over 1 billion worldwide users), if constructive consent were
applied in the trademark recognition realm, it would seem to be an easy argument that
“Face” and “Book” are separately famous trademarks. As such, these large trademark
holders would be given virtually limitless control over all other terms incorporating these
words, such as Teachbook. In this article, I question whether this is a normatively
positive development. Concluding that this development should not be encouraged, I
offer some suggestions to proactively avoid the application of constructive consent to the
trademark realm.
65
William McGeveran, What Campbell Can (and Can’t) Teach Trademark Law
This paper, which will be presented at a University of Washington symposium
celebrating the 20th anniversary of the Supreme Court’s Campbell v. Acuff-Rose Music
decision, considers what lessons that copyright case can teach about the treatment of
parody in trademark law. It also assesses the landscape of trademark parody doctrine
today and suggests paths for improvement in the future. The core lessons of Campbell—
that parody is socially valuable but that it cannot be protected effectively with bright-line
rules—have been useful in trademark as well as copyright law. A third lesson from
Campbell is more cautionary; the case draws explicitly on the particular function of
copyrights, which limits its applicability to trademarks’ very different purposes.
That said, after Campbell—and in part thanks to Campbell—the handling of parody in
trademark cases improved continuously, so that today it is quite difficult to find outlier
cases where courts fail to appreciate and protect legitimate parody. The Article
demonstrates that it’s simply wrong now to claim, as some commentators still do, that
trademark parody adjudication is a serious problem. This persistent mischaracterization
has two pernicious effects: it distracts from what we should be doing to further improve
the law of trademark parodies and it contributes to the false narrative that some
markholders promote in overly broad demand letters. All of us should stop tinkering with
trademark's parody rules to perfect their accuracy. Instead, reform ought to focus on the
real remaining problem: administrative costs of adjudication, which give leverage to
markholders making overly broad demands. Drawing on my past work, I suggest that
most trademark parodies are best handled with a series of defensive doctrines aimed
more broadly at expressive uses.
David Welkowitz, Willfulness (http://www.law.whittier.edu/WelkowitzArticle)
Although “willfulness” or “willful” conduct is not normally an element of a trademark
infringement claim (with some exceptions), willfulness often plays an important role in
the outcome of trademark cases. In counterfeiting and dilution claims, the existence or
non-existence of willfulness determines the nature of the available remedy. A court’s
willingness to award attorney’s fees under the “exceptional cases” provision of the
Lanham Act may be heavily influenced by “willful” behavior. Even though infringement
does not require any sort of fault or intent, “bad faith,” which may include behavior
labeled “willful” by courts often plays a significant role in the outcome. And
contributory liability may turn on a level of fault that could be called willful (or “willful
blindness”). Unfortunately, neither courts nor statutes have consistently defined what
“willfulness” means, and some statutory uses (especially in the trademark dilution
statute) further obscure the meaning of the term. Does “willful” mean “intentional”? If
so, intent to do what? (In this regard, the “willful intent” provision of the federal
dilution statute would be particularly obtuse.) Does “willful” mean “with knowledge”? If
so, knowledge of what? That one’s action is infringing? Or something else? Many
courts have stated that “willful blindness” may be the equivalent of intentional conduct,
without adequately defining what willful blindness means.
66
Focusing primarily on trademark law, this article examines the many uses of willfulness
in trademark law, including some uses of willful or intentional action in determining
infringement. The article examines both case law and jury instructions (as well as
secondary sources and studies) to illustrate the inconsistencies and linguistic problems
with the term, drawing some comparisons with other areas of intellectual property law
and areas of law outside of IP. The article also discusses the implications of recent
Supreme Court discussions of willfulness (in the Safeco decision concerning the Fair
Credit Reporting Act, and the Global-Tech decision concerning secondary liability for
patent infringement) for the interpretation of that term in trademark law. The article will
further discuss some implications of the lack of any clear definition of willfulness for
trademark law, particularly the specter of ever-increasing damage awards (and perhaps
even liability) for conduct that is best characterized as “ordinary” infringement, rather
than extraordinary.
Copyright
James Grimmelmann, Copyright for Literate Robots
Almost by accident, copyright doctrine has concluded that copyright law is for humans
only: read- ing performed by computers doesn't count for infringement purposes.
Conceptually, this makes sense: copyright's ideal of romantic authorship involves
humans writing for other humans. But in an age when more and more manipulation of
copyrighted works is carried out by automated processes, this split between human
reading (infringement) and robotic reading (exempt) has odd consequences and creates
its own tendencies toward a copyright system in which humans oc- cupy a surprisingly
peripheral place. This essay describes the shifts in fair use law that brought us here and
reflects on the role of robots in copyright's cosmology.
Kate Klonick, Comparing Apples to Applejacks: Cognitive Science Concepts of
Similarity Judgment
It seems quintessentially American that in the year of the United States bicentennial, one
maker of a plastic toy Uncle Sam mechanical bank sued another to invalidate a
copyright. In determining the validity of the appellant's copyright, the court compared the
plastic bank to a similar cast-iron Uncle Sam bank that had existed in the public domain
since the 1880s. The appellant claimed a myriad of differences between his copyrighted
bank and that of the original, including a change in the material the bank was made out
of, the shape of the carpetbag Uncle Sam was holding, a shortened figure and narrowed
base, a change in the texture of many of the bank's elements, the addition of leaves
instead of arrows in the talons of an eagle on the bank and alterations to Uncle Sam's
face, hairline, hat, dress, shirt collar and bow tie. While noting that the long list of
changes made the plastic bank more than a "faithful reproduction," the court found the
alterations to be "merely trivial" and invalidated the copyright for lack of originality. But
if the plastic bank was not a simple reproduction, and not sufficiently original, what was
it? What changes, if not to size, substance, texture, art, and shape, could the maker
possibly have made that would have distinguished it sufficiently from its source material?
67
The questions generated by this landmark case highlight how, perhaps more than any
other area of law, copyright law is grounded in the subjectivities of human perception.
This is especially true in regard to derivative works, where courts and legislatures have
long struggled to create laws and tests that outline qualities and categories for
determining similarity between original and derivative material. But the question of how
to create reliable strictures to judge something as subjective as similarity is not unique to
copyright law. At a more theoretical level, cognitive scientists have struggled with the
same questions for decades, creating various scientific and theoretical models to explain
how humans prioritize, categorize and judge features to determine similarity between two
or more objects.
This article will first look at copyright's derivative works right and the factor of
transformation under the fair use test, examining historical issues in both statute and
relevant case law. A brief history and summary of cognitive science and psychology's
ideas about human perception of generalization, similarity and categorization will be
reviewed in Parts I and II. Part III will then compare the cognitive science findings on
how people assess similarity to the similarity tests used by the courts. Further, it will
propose that cognitive science reveals that the courts are highly susceptible to a number
of potential biases and framing heuristics in their tests for judging infringement,
derivative works and fair use. Using these lessons and analysis, this article will suggest
possible improvements to judicial frameworks, and future applications for cognitive
science in copyright law, and in the meantime, ways in which both plaintiffs' and
defendants' copyright attorneys might use such biases to their advantage.
Peter Yu, The Copy in Copyright
This article articulates the need for a right to parody in copyright law. It draws on the
recent reforms to introduce fair dealing exceptions for parody and satire in Australia,
Canada, Hong Kong, Ireland and the United Kingdom as well as the much longer
experience with parody as fair use in the United States. The article also advances
justifications for the right to parody, based on copyright theory, economic benefits and
human rights obligations. The article concludes that a right to parody, while important,
is insufficient to accommodate the needs and interests of internet users. Instead, it calls
for additional exceptions to accommodate the production of predominantly non-
commercial user-generated content.
Andres Sawicki, Law and Informal Rules of Creative Collaboration
The consensus today is that alongside traditional creative industries like film or
literature, there are IP negative spaces—fields in which despite the doctrinal or practical
absence of formal copyright law, artists produce expressive works because social norms
have developed to protect them from freeriding. In this Article, we emphasize a different
locus for the influence of informal rules: the organization of creative production. While
previous work has explained that informal rules can preserve incentives to create
expressive work at copyright’s periphery, we argue that informal rules regulate creative
activity at the very center of the copyright industries by shaping the organization of
collaborative work. Informal rules cover everything from how producers and directors
68
decide when a film is finished to how musicians choose bandmates. In this way, informal
rules operate in the core copyright industries—film, theater, music, television—
previously thought to be dominated by formal copyright law. Moreover, formal copyright
law interacts in complex ways with these informal rules of creative collaboration, thereby
jointly influencing the organization of our cultural production. Crucially, this influence
extends not only to the quantity of cultural production (as classic copyright and
incentives theory would have it), but also to the content of cultural production.